samsul ulum

Tropical Forest Trust

wildlife specialist

kaliwungu city, kendal, central java

phone : 08128816933 or 085216274642

--- On Sat, 9/13/08, roy samp <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
From: roy samp <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [FW]Using GPS Data To Geotag Photos: The B
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Saturday, September 13, 2008, 10:49 PM








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 Subject : Using GPS Data To Geotag Photos: The B


 Date : Sun, 14 Sep 2008 00:16:35 -0400 (EDT)


 From : "samsul samp" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


 To : <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


 Cc : <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>













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 Subject : [Sahabat_primata] Fw: [HARIMAU JAMBI] Using GPS Data To Geotag 
Photos: The Basics



 Date : Fri, 12 Sep 2008 06:42:06 -0700 (PDT)



 From : adnun reno <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>



 To : harimaukita mailinglist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,  sbi-info <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>



 Cc : Lingkungan mailing list <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,  [EMAIL PROTECTED],  Sahabat 
PILI <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,  sahabat primata <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,  badak mailing 
list <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,  [EMAIL PROTECTED]







Dear all,



Baru dapet info dari bang Yoki, mas londo, age et al neh.  Lumayan buat nambah 
pengetahuan n coba di searching lg ajja about geotag-nya. n kalo ada yg dapet 
extension free-nya buat di ArcGIS, bagi-bagi ya :-)best.



A.S.







----- Forwarded Message ----



From: "Adnun Salampessy, S.Hut" 



To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Sent: Friday, September 12, 2008 8:28:21 PM



Subject: [HARIMAU JAMBI] Using GPS Data To Geotag Photos: The Basics















Using Picasa, PicasaWeb or iTag to geotag your photos through Google Earth (or 
Google Maps) is fine for the occasional photo, or for photos from the past 
where you don’t have specific location data, i.e. latitude and longitude. But 
if you’re going to be geotagging a lot of photos in the future, doing it 
manually will turn into a chore very quickly. There’s a way to simplify that 
task: Take location data from a GPS unit, and then embed it into your photo’s 
EXIF header or IPTC tags with software that automates the process. There are a 
lot of free and cheap programs that let you do that, and I’ll be covering many 
of the Windows options in upcoming posts. First, though, I want to go over some 
of the basics of equipment and data. 







Equipment: Some day, most cameras may come with GPS capabilities built-in, so 
that they can automatically geotag your photos as you take them. But I’ve heard 
of only two cameras with built-in GPS released to date: the Navman iCN750 
(discontinued), and the Ricoh Pro G3 GPS Camera, a two-year-old 3-megapixel 
model. So for now, the only reasonable choice is to use a handheld GPS receiver 
that can log your position continuously as a function of time, save that data, 
and then upload it to your computer (typically in GPX format).



Most handheld GPS units can do all of this, with the cheapest units running 
less than a hundred dollars. If you don’t need a large, handheld GPS receiver 
with all its features (data screen, input, maps, etc.), another option is to 
buy a simple GPS datalogger, like the Sony GPSCS1KA or Sony GPS-CS1units. Both 
Sony units are described as being specifically designed for digital camera use, 
but any GPS datalogger capable of saving data in GPX format will work just as 
well (do a Google search for GPS data logger). You won’t save that much money 
buying a datalogger instead of a basic handheld GPS unit, but they are often 
much smaller in size and weight, and can have longer battery lives and store 
more data than handheld units.











Data: You need to have both position and time data stored by the GPS units in 
order to geotag the photos,. The position data is obviously needed for the 
geotagging, but the time data plays a critical part as well. The software 
programs that I’ll be posting about match up the time you take your photo with 
the location the GPS data says you were at for that time, and then embed that 
time-specific location data in the photographs. Dataloggers will normally save 
both the location and time together automatically, but handheld GPS units may 
require you to specify that both time and position data be recorded in a GPS 
tracklog. Handheld units often let you specify whether your position is 
recorded continuously based on distance, time, or some combination of the two.







There’s another catch: some GPS units (like my Garmin) strip out the time data 
if you save the track in a separate tracklog, separate from the active track. 
So if you save a track in these units, make sure you don’t clear out the active 
track as well, or else you’ll have no way to synchronize your position with the 
time you took a photo. Found this out rather annoyingly after having taken a 
whole bunch of photos, saving the track, and then discovering that all the time 
data was gone. The newer Garmin x-series models let you log time and position 
data continuously to a GPX file on their microSD memory cards, bypassing the 
need to manage track data completely (and letting you record literally months 
worth of position and time data on a single microSD card).











You should also check to make sure that your camera is set to the same time as 
your GPS unit; if the camera’s time is off, or in a different time zone, that 
can complicate the process of matching up the GPS track time with the time the 
photo was taken. Many programs come with the ability to adjust for such a time 
difference, but it will make life a lot easier if you make sure they’re in time 
synch right from the start. GPS track times are recorded in UTC (aka Greenwich 
Mean Time), and while most programs can correct for the difference, some have 
problems with that correction.







Uploading the data to your computer from your GPS is usually straightforward; 
if the software that came with your GPS can’t take track data and save it in 
GPX format, a free program like EasyGPS or GPS TrackMaker does a great job.







Summing up: to automate geotagging your photos with GPS, you’ll need a GPS 
receiver that can log both your position and time on a continuous basis, and 
then upload the data to your computer in GPX format, where it can be 
synchronized with your photos based on time.



Info from : 
http://freegeographytools.com/2007/using-gps-data-to-geotag-photos-the-basics--



Posting oleh Adnun Salampessy, S.Hut ke HARIMAU JAMBI pada 9/12/2008 08:18:00 PM











      





      

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