Cap'n Jack
Final Approach
Probably lots of you know this already...I used to do it manually and it took a long time
If you take pictures and carry a GPS with you, you can 'geotag' your pictures.
1) synchronize the camera clock to the GPS clock (you may need to set the camera to UTC time)
2) Have GPS on & receiving; take pictures
3) Back-up your pictures, save the GPS track file as a GPX file
4) Using Microsoft Pro Phototools (free download here http://www.microsoft.com/prophoto/downloads/tools.aspx ) match the pictures to the location. The time the picture is taken is matched to the track point with the closest time; this is assumed to be the point corresponding to the location the picture was taken
5) Save the pictures with the Lat/Long embedded (this is why you work with a back-up file- just in case the program damages the pictures)
6) Upload to Flickr or whatever sharing site you use. Flickr recognizes the geotag in the picture so you can easily link it to a google map
My results are here:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/jacksilver/map
If you take pictures and carry a GPS with you, you can 'geotag' your pictures.
1) synchronize the camera clock to the GPS clock (you may need to set the camera to UTC time)
2) Have GPS on & receiving; take pictures
3) Back-up your pictures, save the GPS track file as a GPX file
4) Using Microsoft Pro Phototools (free download here http://www.microsoft.com/prophoto/downloads/tools.aspx ) match the pictures to the location. The time the picture is taken is matched to the track point with the closest time; this is assumed to be the point corresponding to the location the picture was taken
5) Save the pictures with the Lat/Long embedded (this is why you work with a back-up file- just in case the program damages the pictures)
6) Upload to Flickr or whatever sharing site you use. Flickr recognizes the geotag in the picture so you can easily link it to a google map
My results are here:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/jacksilver/map