tagcloud on your cellphone
All About Symbian showing the new tag cloud in the Photos app on the Nokia N96.
![[N96 Photos tag cloud]](http://www.allaboutsymbian.com/images/features/n96preview/n76b.jpg)
All About Symbian showing the new tag cloud in the Photos app on the Nokia N96.
![[N96 Photos tag cloud]](http://www.allaboutsymbian.com/images/features/n96preview/n76b.jpg)
Flickr has added stats for Pro Accounts with pretty charts and whatnot, you have to activate it though.
Google Analytics has also updated their stats charting abilities. You'll have to update the JavaScript they provide (on your pages) in order to get the increased capabilities.
Great, more statscrack for hit addicts.
What do you mean, I have to wait until tomorrow for my Flickrstats to be processed? I need my fix now...
Whew, nevermind, trembling madness averted:
In addition to hit stats, Flickr also provides a nice breakdown of photo attributes (tagged/not tagged, geocoded/not geocoded, etc.) - it doesn't show photo vs. screenshot through, which would be a useful one.
Since the new stats provide time-based analysis (including down to the individual photo level - just click on "Photo stats" on a photo's page), it will be a lot easier to get a sense of the changing popularity of your photos - just the raw numbers tended to distort things, as you may get photos that are popular for a couple days and then never clicked on again.
It occurs to me another interesting breakdown would be to see where your Creative Commons photos have been linked / blogged from (and where your fully copyrighted, no public rights photos have been posted, if you're into laying on the smackdown). As well it would be interesting to be able to see whether CC-licensed photos get more traffic on average than no rights ones.
Flickr has launched Places where, if I can borrow a term from Lorcan, they are making their data work hard, providing a (dare I say it) portal to each location, with a map, temperature, time, popular tags, groups, and "interesting" photos (where photos are selected with a fairly complicated algorithm including explicitly mapped photos, along with photos that just have been tagged e.g. "ottawa", with interestingness metrics mixed in).
You can see this evolving in various fairly obvious social networking, travel, and discussion directions.
Check it out:
http://flickr.com/places/Canada/Ontario/Ottawa
They've also changed the map display for photos, the default global view now shows tags placed at locations, rather than just dots
Personally I find it's actually less intuitive to navigate their new interface than the all-dots one.
Schmap has an interesting approach to getting photos for their online travel guides: they have a nice online permissions system where they send you a message along the lines of "we'd like to use your photo with permission" and you go and click yes or no. It's something that wouldn't have been possible without the current wealth of online content. They've used three of my photos (with permission):
http://www.schmap.com/newyork/sights_brooklyn/#p=38513&i=38513_1.jpg
http://www.schmap.com/copenhagen/tours_tour3/#p=58898&i=58898.jpg
http://www.schmap.com/toronto/tours_tour1/#p=19510&i=19510_3.jpg
While surfing the net two years ago, the 41-year-old Albertan came across some visually stunning photographs of the Earth from way, way up that a man from California had captured in the 1990s, all with a big balloon and a "regular old" camera.
Mr. Rafaat's imagination soared.
...
Using a Kaysam weather balloon (bought as part of six-pack from New Jersey), a used Nikon Coolpix P2 digital camera purchased off eBay, and a global positioning system tracking device, Mr. Rafaat and two of his balloon-enthusiast friends, Barry Sloan and James Ewen, released SABLE-3 (Southern Alberta Balloon Launch Experiment) at 9:31 a.m. on Aug. 11. The camera - set to take photos at one-minute intervals - and the GPS were put into a Styrofoam box. That payload, built by Mr. Rafaat's Grade 7 science class, was affixed to a parachute, the parachute to the helium-filled balloon.
Globe and Mail - A view from the stratosphere - September 5, 2007
SABLE-3 (Note: site is slow)
For electronics they're using a Byonics Micro-Trak 300 transmitter (it's not a data logger). Presumably attached to one of the Byonics GPS modules. UPDATE 2007-11-10: In the comments they indicate the GPS is from SparkFun.
The state of the union between inexpensive GPS loggers and the Mac is not so good improving.
As far as I know:
Support efforts:
I suggest:
* Get Semsons connected with Mac GPS driver developers, in particular, free units to gpsbabel developers (which has the advantage of being cross-platform, so many users benefit, not just Mac users).
* Someone buy Steve Jobs a GPS and get him into geocoding photos. Or convince him to put GPS-compatible mapping in the next generation of iPhone / iPhoto / MacBook / OS X and his reality-distortion strange attractor field will have developers clambering over one another to make their devices compatible.
UPDATE 2007-08-15: A question from me about Mac support for GPS loggers has now been posted to Macintouch
Also as you can see in the comments below, Mac support for the DG-100 in gpsbabel may be coming. Please lend your support to these efforts if you can.
UPDATE 2007-11-20: Updated info above based on Sony GPS-CS1 for Mac blog (Leopard and 10.4.11) and additional comments.
UPDATE 2007-11-23: See Sony GPS Logger On The Go - bridge to your Mac for one possiblity to use the Sony GPS-CS1 with a Mac or any other device that supports USB storage.
UPDATE 2007-12-21: It is reported that new versions of the Amod AGL3080 GPS Data Logger (SiRF III, Driverless, 128MB, Push to Log) (Windows and Mac Image Software included) are working well (there had been some GPS sensitivity issues as reported in a number of reviews). It supports Windows and Mac out of the box, it works like a USB memory key (the same as the Sony GPS-CS1).
UPDATE 2008-01-03: AMOD is offering 4 AGL3080s for review by Mac users only. First come, first serve.
UPDATE 2008-01-08: All four AMOD units have now been sent, the offer is now closed.
The new GraphicConverter 6 ($35 new or $20 upgrade for this venerable and invaluable Mac app) has an option to manually geocode photos, but it is so well-hidden I suspect few people will find it.
1. Download GraphicConverter 6 and Google Earth Mac
2. Install the GraphicConverter Contextual Menu (this will come up as an install option, or you can do it from the menu GraphicConverter->Preferences... Plugins
You have to logout and back in, or reboot, for the contextual menu to activate the first time.
As far as I can tell, the Contextual Menu only appears in the GraphicConverter browser
File->Browse Folder...
3. Launch GraphicConverter browser.
Launch Google Earth and position your cursor at the precise location you want to geocode.
Switch back to GraphicConverter (e.g. using Apple key and Tab to switch applications).
Select photo(s) to geocode.
Select terribly-named menu item (right button contextual menu) "Set GPS from current Google Earth position" (it really should say "Set GPS-EXIF ...").
(You'll probably need to click through the above screen capture and look at the large image to read the menu clearly.)
Photos with GPS-EXIF have a little world icon in the upper right of their browser thumbnail.
You're supposed to be able to view geocoded photos in Google Earth using menu item "Show Position in Google Earth"
but I couldn't get it to work.
I know there are other tools out there (it would be nice if this was built-in to iPhoto 08, but I haven't seen any info about that). You're welcome to list other Mac or web tools in the comments, I also have some of them listed on my geocoding photos page. I thought it was worthwhile going through GraphicConverter since it's a very common/popular Mac image editor and the GPS-EXIF feature is really buried and obscured.
For Windows, there is a much nicer and easier manual workflow using Picasa and Google Earth.
UPDATE 2008-01-10: I have reviewed the Mac program HoudahGeo, as suggested in the comments.
If you add the magic tag
upcoming:event=202683
to your Science Foo Camp photos, Flickr will automatically show a link that says
Taken at Science Foo Camp.
and the photo will appear on the Upcoming event page as well.
I guess you just grab the number from the Upcoming page URL - in my case, I just noticed this feature and copied the info from Duncan Hull.
I have been interested in small, inexpensive GPS loggers mainly for geocoding photos.
My current fave is the Globalsat DG-100, despite its terrible software.
(It has the SIRFstar III chipset, which is sensitive enough to do this. SIRFstar II may not be able to, at least I've never been able to get a lock on a plane using my Sony GPS.)
I have been interested to see if I can capture entire plane flights, including geocoding photos that I take in the air. This is possible.
Please note however:
1) Ask the flight crew for permission (well, at least once per airline, anyway)
2) The logger I use is self-contained. If you have a Bluetooth logger, or some other kind with some transmission facility, you may not be allowed to use it. Only a few airlines permit Bluetooth, and I don't think any of them permit it during takeoff and landing
You have to be next to a window, the GPS needs a good sky view. I usually hold it in my hand about 10-15 cm below and to an angle to the window during takeoff and landing, the rest of the time it can just sit on your seat tray. You can see examples of the positioning at the bottom of this post.
So, what do you get?
Google Earth can read GPX files directly, this is the result of loading San Francisco to Toronto.
Just to emphasize, this is real data from my GPS. There's a little leg there on the SF side which is my taxi ride from Mountain View.
If you want to get fancier, GPS Visualizer.com can take GPX files and do all sorts of cool things with them, including colouring by altitude or by speed, as well as making time-based tracks for Google Earth to play.
People often complain about GPS altitude estimation, but it looks fairly reasonable to me, 11000 metres. The speed estimates on the other hand were way off, it estimated the plane was going like mach 3 if I read the numbers right.
I imagine the relative speed information is correct though.
Here's a view of my Toronto to Ottawa flight coloured by speed
And here's the same flight with Google Earth tilted, with a track produced using GPS Vis setting "Altitude: Absolute (flight)"
How accurate is it? Well here's me landing in Toronto (cyan line)
And here's what I think is an amazingly cool comparison of a view in Google Earth compared with a photo whose geocoding tells me it was taken in the same spot
Google Earth, with geoposition of photo taken indicated within the screen cap, full photo below. The zigzag road makes it pretty obvious they are images of the same location, one (probably) satellite, the other taken by me this morning
Positioning of GPS:
I will upload the GPX and KMZ track info later, so you can load the tracks into Google Earth yourself if you want.
Previously:
June 24, 2007 GPS on a plane
You may wonder what interests me about automated geotagging of photos using a GPS.
There are a couple things.
One is that I can see the tracks of where I've walked (or ridden on the train, or flown).
The other is that I can learn more about what I photographed.
I'm walking around Paris, I see a church with a motto GLORIA DEO * PAX TERRAE
That's cool. Snap a photo.
I have no idea what church it is.
Get home, georeference it automatically, and now I'm in Google Earth
So that's cool, now I know where I was, and I can see the beautiful cross-shape of the church.
But what church?
Turn on Geographic Web... no help.
Turn on Google Earth Community... aha!
It's the Eglise Saint-Nicolas-du-Chardonnet (website, Wikipedia).
In a sense, physical objects can now tell you about themselves, as in Vinge's Rainbows End.
But it's quite a delayed process.
What I should be able to do is load my phone or camera's multi-gig memory up with map info (or download live info, if I didn't have outrageous data charges) and do this in real time. But unfortunately Google Maps Mobile seems to have no concept of running as a nice generic Java mobile app that can talk to my GPS (e.g. on my K790 phone using Bluetooth GPS), Google Maps Mobile instead is all locked up with specific carriers and phones, and I don't think it will let you download maps in advance. j2memap for some reason only pulls in satellite views, not street name views or enhanced geographic info. Hmm, if only I had a chance to talk to someone at Google...
(This posting for Colin, geothinking author.)
More info and thoughts along these lines in my Mapping category and on my geocoding photos page.
The Nikon D2X, the company’s current top-of-the-line SLR model ($5,100), works with an optional MC-35 GPS Adapter cord ($139) that connects with a standard G.P.S. receiver (which you must also buy) to automatically save location coordinates with each photograph.
But G.P.S. is starting to show up among lower-priced cameras. The new Ricoh 500SE (about $1,000), a point-and-shoot model aimed at outdoor enthusiasts, has a built-in G.P.S. device. It’s even showing up on camera phones, including the Nokia N95, though the $749 price is still a bit steep.
New York Times - Snapshots That Do More Than Bore Friends - June 10, 2007
via EveryTrail Blog
Yes, to be fair, in various places I have written about or linked to these high-end products, but I have also tried repeatedly to emphasize that for those of us without thousands of dollars to spare you can accomplish great automatic photo geocoding with a $100 GPS logger. I think maybe I need to emphasize that point more.
Previously:
June 28, 2007 Wired gets it wrong on geocoding photos
CBS 5 KPIX San Francisco has a video report on photo geocoding (there's a brief ad at the beginning).
via EveryTrail Blog
This year somehow has had threads of Linnaeus, Lamarck and the Jardin des Plantes (botanical garden) running through it.
When I was visiting the Jardin in 2004, the rather grand building at the end of the promenade was of course unmissable
but I have to say I didn't really think about what it might be.
I made a point of returning to the garden in April of 2007 but I still only used the building as a photo backdrop
It wasn't until I read Paris to the Moon in May, post-visit, that I realized there were exhibits in the grand buildings, and it wasn't until later that month when I read Everything is Miscellaneous that I discovered that Lamarck had been a professor at the institution that includes the grand garden buildings, the Muséum national d'histoire naturelle.
A week after that, at the very end of May, I pointed to Linnaeus and his passion for order, in National Geographic.
Then in June I found myself at the IATUL conference in Sweden, with a day-trip to Uppsala, and of course, having not really paid attention to the details of the excursion and the location beforehand, it wasn't until I got there that I realized there would be a great deal about Linnaeus, since he was Chair of Botany at Uppsala University (Uppsala universitet), plus which it's the 300th anniversary of his birth. He's buried in Uppsala Cathedral (Uppsala domkyrka) - the tomb, inset in the floor, is surrounded by small plants and flowers. There was also an exhibit at Carolina Rediviva, the main building of the Uppsala University library.
Although there weren't many display cases, the exhibit was most ably described by our guide, who if I understood correctly also happens to be the head of the library. I learned that as part of his system of the world, Linn had also had a classsification for minerals, but it didn't catch on.
Then we went to Linnaeus' Hammarby, which was his summer cottage. Unless you are particularly fascinated by rooms in a cottage, there's not that much to see there, although the grounds are pleasant.
You can read more about the Swedish celebrations of his life and work at
And as the conclusion of my Swedish Linnaeus thread, I received the book Carl Linnaeus as a speaker gift.
Back in Paris for a day, I walked to the Jardin des Plantes, determined to finally explore the natural history museum. To my surprise, I found myself on Linnaeus Street
The Grande Galerie de l'Évolution really is quite grand
You can see the Minerology Museum just to the left of it.
Inside the Gallery is a large open space, dimly lit, with animal reconstructions as its main focus.
The centre of the Gallery is given over to a grand procession of African animals.
There are also book displays (I don't know if they are the original books) of the writings of Lamarck (first, naturally) and then Darwin.
It's hard to convey a good sense of the interior, but I can at least say that on a warm day where tourists were presumably clambering over themselves at the main Parisian attractions, the gallery was cool and (perhaps sadly) quiet.
Wired's otherwise admirable piece on Google Maps/Earth
Google Maps Is Changing the Way We See the World
has this oddly misleading sidebar:
Pinpointed Photography
Organizing vacation pics would be so much easier if you could remember exactly where you took each one. The Ricoh 500SE can help: This 8-megapixel digicam comes with a built-in GPS receiver that notes longitude and latitude in the file every time you fire up the shutter. (Programs like Google Maps can decode them.) Not ready to drop $1,100? Try a lower-tech workaround: Follow your photos with snapshots of the readout from a cheap GPS unit and type in the coordinates later as tags on Flickr. As GPS becomes more of a must-have feature, you'll see this kind of kung fu embedded in all your gadgets. Imagine checking your computer to see exactly where you left your glasses.
Now I know sidebars can never fit in all you want, but giving as the two options a $1000 camera and a manual process seem to have left out a more practical middle ground, the one I use: a $100 GPS logger plus some software. See my geocoding photos page for more info.
Maybe I should take Polaroids and stick them on a map with pushpins and string, a la Heros.
Actually, come to think of it, that would be kind of cool.
EXPIRED - Writing photo location in pen on the back of the print
TIRED - Typing coordinates into Flickr
WIRED - automatic geocoding with inexpensive GPS loggers and timestamp matching
PicasaWeb, the Google web photo gallery, has now got improved metadata features, including supporting geocoded photos (although it is not clear from their blog posting, it will read the EXIF-GPS for the exact location, if available).
See e.g. a photo I took in Regent's Park
http://picasaweb.google.com/scilib/2007_06_19/photo#map
There is also a one-click link to view the photos in Google Earth.
If you want more info about this topic, I have a page on geocoding photos.
A couple notes:
JetBlue Airways Corporation (Nasdaq:JBLU) today announces a partnership with Google Maps to provide customers with a real-time flight tracking channel on its signature seatback televisions to map the aircraft's route. To celebrate, the low-fare, high-frills airline is launching a "JetBlue Point of View" photo contest(a), inviting customers to share their own summer travel routes on a Google Maps mash-up on www.jetblue.com/google
...
The moving map feature will be located on channel 13 of JetBlue's in-seat satellite television system, provided by LiveTV. In addition to in-flight tracking, customers can also refer their friends, family and loved ones to www.jetblue.com, where their flights can be tracked live using Google's technology online, including the flight's estimated departure and arrival times.
investor.jetblue.com - JetBlue Airways Announces Partnership With Google Maps to Provide Real-Time Flight Tracking Feature
how to enter:
1. Take photos from the window of any JetBlue flight (when advised by your Inflight Crew that it’s okay to use electronic devices) between June 4 and September 3 [2007]. Please amateur photographers only
(residents of the continental US only)
I always feel a bit awkward taking photos through my airplane window, like I'm breaking some rule - this is the first time I've heard of an airline specifically requesting it. I'd really like to capture some GPS tracks on a plane as well, but I always imagine trying to explain to the airplane staff something like "I'm holding this small plastic box with flashing LEDs up to the fragile window of the plane to communicate with satellites in order to determine our exact position" and I can never come up with a scenario in which it turns out well.
Flickr has a new &format=kml_nl option, which generates a network link that Google Earth can read to display the selected photos.
Here's an example for my feed, photos taken in France
http://api.flickr.com/services/feeds/geo/france/?id=48889071218@N01&format=kml_nl
and photos taken in Paris
http://api.flickr.com/services/feeds/geo/fr/paris/?id=48889071218@N01&format=kml_nl
There's detailed information at
http://geobloggers.com/archives/2007/05/31/flickr-kml-and-a-stroll-down-memory-lane/
via discussion group Geotagging Flickr
You send your news-worthy photos (or videos) to Scoopt, they try to sell them to the media. (Err, and they also are the media, now that they're owned by Getty Images.)
Interestingly there is a cross-promotion with the Sony Ericsson K800/K790 cameraphone
If you buy a new Sony Ericsson Cyber-shot cameraphone – that's a K790i or K800i with a cracking 3.2 megapixel camera - check out the Internet link on the main menu. There you should find a link straight to Scoopt!
Note: Phone menus will differ depending on cellphone provider and country.
I have to write this down immediately because the steps are rather more complex than I would like, and I'm likely to forget them again.
1. Download photos from camera
2. Download GPS tracks
2a. Connect GPS logger via USB
2b. Power ON Globalsat GPS logger
(I will have more to say about my new GPS logger in a future posting.) UPDATE 2007-05-06: See my review of the Globalsat DG-100 GPS data logger for more info. ENDUPDATE
In my case, use latest version of GS Data Logger Utility S-0PC-0L-07031401 (I downloaded it from the support site).
then
(download all the files TrackRecord->Load Track Points... )
Once you have them all
File->Select All Files
Map->View Point (wait for them all to be processed, it may take a while)
File->Export->GPX File...
3. Determine GMT and camera offsets
Note: RoboGEO measures GMT offsets in minutes GMT is AHEAD of your local time
(the opposite of the way timezones are usually measured)
and camera time error offset in seconds.
I had of course forgotten to set my camera time, so it was in my local and was a minute slow
4. Set RoboGEO prefs accordingly
File->Preferences->Common Settings
CameraOffset -60 [save]
UtcTimeBias +240 [save] (camera was set to Eastern time zone, GMT-4, so GMT is four hours ahead)
This time setting is so confusing that I am just going to set my camera to accurate UTC in the future.
(I will have more to say about time in a later posting.)
If you're wondering if a minute matters (the camera time offset), the answer is very much yes. A minute (even when walking) is a very visible difference in location accuracy (basically without this correction, my photos would all be placed several meters behind the actual location they were taken).
4. Load and process in RoboGEO
4a. Select directory with images (Step #1 "Select an entire folder")
4b. Since it's a GPX file, load as tracklog (Step #2 "From a tracklog file")
5. Verify positions in Google Earth from RoboGEO
Step #3 "Export to Google Earth"
Note: RoboGEO does not auto-rotate images (taken in portrait mode 90 degrees), which kinda sucks in terms of Google Earth display for those images.
6. Once positions are verified, write to EXIF from RoboGEO
Step #3 "Write the location data to the EXIF headers"
whew
Just for completeness, if you want to upload to Flickr and have the (now EXIF location stamped) photos automatically mapped, make sure you set
http://www.flickr.com/account/geo/exif
BEFORE you upload, and DO NOT resize using the uploader (it will lose the EXIF location data if you do).
For more info, see my permanent reference page on geocoding photos.
Standard data formats enable powerful interoperability.
For example, Google's new support for GeoRSS means that (if you have already geocoded your photos in Flickr), you can easily plot your photo feed on a Google Map
Simply locate the feed link on your Flickr page, e.g.
Feed – Subscribe to rakerman's photos
copy the link, add &georss=true on the end, and paste it into the Google Maps search box.
via MAKE - GeoRSS with Google and MyMaps...
Here's what it looks like
The Musée de l'Elysée in Lausanne Switzerland wants to put your work on their gallery walls. You can upload your photographs via the web and if selected, they'll email you a photograph of your work on display in the gallery. Check out We Are All Photographers Now! for more information on how to participate.
via FlickrBlog
Anyone who has obsessively searched for a piece of information will appreciate this tale from Vanity Fair, about the search for the location of a treasured desktop wallpaper
Autumn and the Plot Against Me
via Digg
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