How dare you post comments in a community... That's like... community-ism!
But yourr righ. I don't think this guy watched his commercials and clicked enough banner ads to get here. Probably has one of those blue state credit scores too. I bet he can even afford to buy things outside of the Walmart poverty cycle. He might even be one of those people who calls out my idiotic gender assumptions! Probably uses that lipstix OS too. /satire
Im in the greatest and freest country with no problems at all in the world, America, and our local fedex called me and figured out where I was since i basically have an unfindable property in another unfindable property which is indistinguishable from 7 other neighboring properties. My guess is they did something like this map because now they arrive without issue. Was a pleasant surprise since i thought they would not care and not deliver
Reminds me of one I saw years ago from Ireland with a similar address "you know the lad with the glasses, goes to the university and his da' runs the bakery" or something to that effect. And having lived there, I have no difficulty this would find it's recipient, haha!
OMG my mom, when I was in school in England, only sent one letter while I was there - addressed it to my name and "the college in Yorkshire". No street no number and there is more than one college in Yorkshire; but they delivered it to me.
Provided it gets routed to the right town in Iceland, I don't think this will take any more resources than any other letter. The postie will know the house anyway.
At least there are street names. Plenty of streets are unnamed.
I'm not saying that a piece of mail should only be delivering if an automated system can figure out where it goes. Clearly human interaction is sometimes necessary. However, there should be some limit to how much human interaction a piece of mail can require and still be delivered.
My guess is that since Iceland is a small, sparsely populated place, a mailman there can follow such a map without particular effort, especially if the location is part of his regular route. I just think "delivering to a map" should probably be in the "quaint thing they do in Iceland" category rather than the "expected from any good postal service" one.
The address in question is on about a 15km (~9mi) stretch of road, and realistically the odds of choosing the correct house randomly are about one in five.
So I'm going to go with "things are different in Iceland", definitely.
Odds are the postman glanced at the map and knew exactly where this was meant to go.
Iceland is a country of about 300k people, with one third of that in a single city, and it's smaller in size than most states in the US. The resources required to figure something like this out are pretty minimal. As long as you're not trying to map an address in Reykjavik, you're probably fine.