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Wikipedia:Featured picture candidates/delist/File:India-locator-map-blank.svg

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Voting period is over. Please don't add any new votes. Voting period ends on 2 Feb 2013 at 21:17:53 (UTC)

An outline of India, without any captions, no cities listed, that allows lazy use in articles of not-particularly-useful maps.
Reason
Locator maps are useful ways to get a temporary map into an article showing its rough location. But they fail to show any other context: For example, they tend not to be geographical maps, so fail to give infornation on major features nearby, and show no other cities, so fail as political maps. As such, the encyclopedic value is low, and the best you can say about them is that they're a fast way to get something for your article.

As such, I don't see them as the best of our work, as our best work involves effort to make the best possible map for use in an article, not making do with a fast, easy option, that provides less than the minimal encyclopedic information that any other map used for discussing a location anywhere but Wikipedia would include.

You may get the feeling I think locator maps are a blight on Wikipedia. That's because they are. It only takes a few times trying to figure out basic things like "What's the nearest large population centre to X" using Wikipedia, and failing because of the ubiquity of bad maps on Wikipedia...

Well, I'll spare you further rants. It's not Wikipedia's best work. It's part of a systemic problem that ranks amongst Wikipedia's worst work.

Articles this image appears in
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Previous nomination/s
Wikipedia:Featured_picture_candidates/India-locator-map-blank.svg
Nominator
Adam Cuerden (talk)
They can be useful as a stopgap, where they stop being useful is when even featured articles use them, without adding other cities. Adam Cuerden (talk) 19:01, 22 January 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Delisted --Armbrust The Homunculus 21:19, 2 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]