[pct-l] Photos & Captions
Ann Gerckens
anngerckens at gmail.com
Sun Feb 25 23:07:19 CST 2018
An acquaintance of mine used to come visit me after doing an AT section so I could tell which picture was of what.😁
Ann Gerckens, Sent from my iPhone
> On Feb 25, 2018, at 7:55 PM, Joe Roth <jroth2353 at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> My I phone can record live shots. It’ll take a short video which allows me to say ;June 22, 2018, Mack, mount Whitney.” Or some such information.
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> On Feb 25, 2018, at 1:33 AM, Town Food <pctl at marcusschwartz.com> wrote:
>
> For landmarks, assuming these are digital photos, there are a couple ways that I know of. JPEG files usually have extra data attached to them in a format called EXIF, and that data can sometimes be used to figure out where the photo was taken.
>
> First, and easiest, some cameras have GPS receivers (or other location sensors), and will attach your location data to the photo in an EXIF tag. Most smartphones do this by default. This data can later be read by appropriate software. E.g. I've heard of software that will put your photos on a map according to where they were taken -- I haven't tried it myself though.
>
> Second, digital cameras that don't have GPS will normally at least have a clock, and put the time and date of the photo in an EXIF tag. If you have a record of where you were each day (e.g. I wrote down my mileage according to the Halfmile app each night), you can infer which stretch of the trail the photo is from.
>
> And lastly, when you're not sure where you took a photo but have some guesses, you could always just google those guesses and see if they look like your photo.
>
> I'm afraid none of that is much help for identifying hikers, though... I too wish I'd taken down who was in which photo (and taken more photos of people and less of scenery). I've always wished cameras would let you record a short voice clip with your photo, e.g. "Picture of Mike, mile 2352".
>
> -=Marcus
>
>> On 02/25/2018 01:13 AM, Michael Donnay wrote:
>> After many hikes on the trail, I have finished with a collection of
>> thousands of photos. But years later, I have little way of knowing
>> what is in each photo. At least they are in sequential order from
>> Campo to Manning. I wish I had somehow recorded the name of the peak,
>> pass, range, valley, river, lake, meadow, hiker, etc in each photo.
>> Has anyone figured out an easy way of doing this? Does it require
>> some special camera equipment? Thanks,Mike _______________________________________________ Pct-L mailing list Pct-L at backcountry.net To unsubscribe, or change options visit: http://mailman.backcountry.net/mailman/listinfo/pct-l
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