> My advice:
>
> set the camera clock in UTC (regardless of where you live; it's the
> One True Timezone :-)
>
> Before going out geotagging, set the clock, because if it's right you
> can either skip or have an easier time with the time sync issue.
>
> take a picture of the GPS receiver
Andrew Gregory wrote:
>On Tue, 23 Feb 2010 04:18:38 +0800, Niklas Cholmkvist
> wrote:
>
>>I own a cell phone which can take pictures, but it doesn't store
>>pictures in exif format. After much research over time it seems I
>>couldn't even add exif by hand to the pictures I took with it.(with the
>
On Tue, 23 Feb 2010 04:18:38 +0800, Niklas Cholmkvist
wrote:
> I own a cell phone which can take pictures, but it doesn't store
> pictures in exif format. After much research over time it seems I
> couldn't even add exif by hand to the pictures I took with it.(with the
> purpose to put the modi
Yesterday I ordered my first camera(Nikon Coolpix L19). Mostly with the
purpose of taking photos while I have a gps along with me, to later
geotag photos with josm and later use the pictures as sources for street
names or Points of Interest.
Does anyone have that camera? I was a bit uns
Hi,
I own a cell phone which can take pictures, but it doesn't store
pictures in exif format. After much research over time it seems I
couldn't even add exif by hand to the pictures I took with it.(with the
purpose to put the modification date in exif format in the picture by
hand)
Yesterday I or
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