Tracking the tools that decentralize the media. tools process ideas resources eventsav

unmediated

 

January 22, 2005

GPS Digital Camera Knows Where Pictures Were Taken


A new digital camera from Ricoh has a built-in GPS feature and encodes each photo with information on where in the world it was taken. Special software can then automatically use that information to enable, for example, special travel-photo blogs that bring up photos when you click on locations on a map.
Posted by yatta at 01:24 AM


Comments

I don't understand why the don't integrate a compass and an altitude meter in it? That would make this camera really useful.

Posted by: gijs at January 22, 2005 06:04 AM

All well and good, but what's really needed:

GPS enabled camera that:
1) takes the picture;
2) watermarks the image with a user-defined choice of coordinate system and memo;
3) writes the coordinate information AND the accuracy estimate into the EXIF data of the photo;
4) creates a industry standard ESRI GIS shapefile that can be used to 'hotlink' the photos with GIS mapping software.

All the GeoLink types of solutions out there right now are bogus. Too much post-processing: downloading GPS track logs and the like to then 'link' with the photos. This could and should be done automatically within a GPS/camera solution, especially with the processing power now available.

But, so much effort is going into integrating GPS into cellphones and vehicles for tracking the movements of average Joe (and uninformed) citizens right now for any effort to be made in producing a tool that would extremely useful to only a few.

Posted by: RonT at July 1, 2005 12:22 PM

Excerpt:
Post a comment









Remember personal info?