[pct-l] Pct-l Digest, Vol 23, Issue 59
Ken Powers
ken at gottawalk.com
Mon Nov 23 13:26:38 CST 2009
Or if you are more interested in the gps side of the equation look into the
new Garmin Colorado 500 gps's that take photos. In any case check the
quality of the photos you take. I wouldn't be satisfied with 3 mb photos
anymore.
Another alternative is to carry a gps with you when taking pictures. Be sure
to sync the clocks between the gps and the camera. There are several
programs that will "geotag" your pictures from the gps's active track log by
comparing the times. The geotag information gets written to the EXIF data
associated with the picture.
I just called up one of my old photos to check out these facts. I used
IrfanView (a free program) to view the photo. Under the Image menu item
selected the Information item. Then selected EXIF Information button. Then
selected "Show in Google Earth" button and up popped the view of Crater
Lake! Pretty cool stuff!
Ken
----- Original Message -----
From: <canoeman at qnet.com>
To: <pct-l at backcountry.net>
Sent: Monday, November 23, 2009 10:16 AM
Subject: Re: [pct-l] Pct-l Digest, Vol 23, Issue 59
Just responding to hiker who asked about how to figure out where the
picture
was taken.
here you go
first option
COOLPIX P6000: Nikon's first camera with built-in GPS
second unit
Sony GPS-CS1KA Digital camera GPS unit
third unit
Sony GPS-CS1KASP Digital camera GPS unit
the last two plug into just about any camera.
the first is a bit pricey but its all in one, more for photo bugs
canoeman
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