I’m new and have been looking at the map and apart from the motorways there is very little there. Im going to do my best to help out but there is a lot to do so any help would be appreciated. I did a bit of driving around today (Son likes to have a sleep in the car so good time to do it) and am waiting on my route to be loaded up. Once its there I will try out the editing section as well. Hopefully I don’t mess anything up. I’m mainly in the Antrim area.
When there’s no map to begin with in your area, you really shouldn’t worry about messing things up, but if you want to feel really safe, start editing your own segments - create some, delete some, change their geometry, etc., before trying to edit other segments… but there’s not really much damage you can do at this point, so dive right in!
I’m in Co. Kerry and there is even less on the waze map here. When I started there was nothing, no roads or towns at all. I have added a few and began editing the tracks I have made by adding names and road classifications etc.
There seems to be a few wazers around Dublin too and then there is us too at opposite ends of the island - not much chance of us joining the dots
[this seems to be a very old thread that has been revived, but I’ll respond to the question anyway. Perhaps this belongs in the UK forum though…]
Short answer: yes, once you cross the border and start roaming on a network on the other side, they’ll charge you hefty roaming rates, however:
I dislike O2 (for all sorts of reasons) but switched to Three last year. Although I haven’t tried it, they have this “Three at home” thingy whereby you got charged the same rates you would on your home network when you’re roaming in another country if Three also operate in that country and you’re roaming on Three.
Otherwise, I imagine this is a common problem anywhere there’s a land border and different mobile operators on either side of the border. It’d be nice to be able to move in and out of adjacent jurisdictions and roam freely without the risk of large bills!