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Article GeotaggingGeotagging, also sometimes but not often called geocoding, is the practice of adding geographical identification information into the photographs metadata. This may be done at the time the photo is taken, may be done soon after based on other information captured at the same time the photographs were taken or could be added later. So why would we want to do this:-
You could also use it to tell breakdown services where you are to get rescued, providing you also have a mobile phone. When abroad it may allow you to fix your current location on a map. This is a long page, and may take a couple of reads to completely make sense to you, but I think its well worth the effort, as Geotagging is starting to become more common, and there are, as you will see, low-cost as well as expensive ways to achieve this. How we Geotag There are a number ways to do this, in an accurate and automated way at the time the photo is taken or soon after, based upon GPS (about 32 global positioning satellites). Usually this will record the latitude and longitude, plus a very accurate time and a height above sea level. With systems that contain a digital compass the direction that you are pointing can also be recorded, but this is rare.
Dedicated Bluetooth receivers interfacing GPS data into camera. This is a similar sized unit to the dedicated geotagger, but the GPS information is coming from a separate GPS unit in your pocket. A cable from the unit is connected to the camera. You need both a camera that can accept the information as above plus a separate GPS that sends information via Bluetooth and can be set to give out the right sort of data required. The manufacturers of each of these devices say which GPS units it will work with. Interface cable and GPS unit. The GPS unit may be in your pocket or perhaps on a stand clipped to the camera or to the camera strap. Cables to devises in your pocket are inconvenient to use, and that's putting it politely. On the camera strap is better, or on the camera. The logic in taking the last two approaches is that you may already have a suitable GPS unit. If you were going out to get something specific then a dedicated geotagger would be more convenient. Capture GPS track and add to card before images are uploaded. There is a small device about the size of a matchbox, that records your location over time. This runs in your pocket. Having taken your photos, you take the card out of the camera and plug it into this small unit, and using the time it can add the Geotagging information into all of the photographs. The cost is small, quoted as $100. Capture GPS track and add via special software on your computer. This is a similar technique but uses the facility built into some GPS/satnavs to record a track. This information can be uploaded to a computer. A special program, some freeware, some shareware, can then be used that compares the time on the photographs with the satnav GPS track and adds the Geotagging information. If you already have or buy a cheap second-hand GPS with this capability then this is the lowest cost route. The disadvantage is that you have to keep the information and actually run this. In addition you can use some mapping systems and software to find the locations and add the Geotags later. This is of course far more prone to error. Manual retagging There are a lot of mapping systems and add-ons for mapping systems that allow you to get the longitude and latitude, there are also look up tables showing many places and many places and topics contain Geotagging information within Wikipedia. Overcoming difficulties Battery Power Some ways of achieving Geotagging can be heavy on batteries.
This can have a huge affect on the number of photographs you can take before the battery is flat. In order to extend the battery life some, but not all, units have special modes. The Geopic II for example, a dedicated Geotagging device powered from the camera, has normal, battery saver and freeze modes. They say typical battery counts are 1750 images per battery without the device connected, 1690 with it in freeze mode, 970 in battery saver mode and 315 in normal mode. Inside buildings Few if any GPS units will work if they don't have obstructions between them and the sky. They can see (receive radio from) up to 20 satellites to get their fix, but need to be able to see at least 3. Similarly some large buildings, especially some reflective ones, can be a problem and cause the fix to be lost. Some units automatically give the last good fix they had, some others have a freeze mode that allows you to lock a reference. Some try to predict where the unit is now from its last position and last few minutes direction, this is useful in car systems to get through short tunnels and the like. Accuracy Different map projection systems may produce small differences, it's quite common when out and about to find small differences between the maps and ground, either brought about by the ground shape, surveying corrections, and from mapping a part of a round planet onto flat sheets. Also in some new or developing areas there may have been provisional information that was used, and other changes and construction that has occurred and not yet put on the map. Its also difficult when online to know how old a map or aerial photograph is. So not all errors we discover will be the Geotagging. From what I have read I think its held within the RAW Exif data simply as degrees, gong to 5 decimal places, and the other displays we see, is the result of the software reading it, so we get to see the same picture giving slightly different output in different editors or viewers. It would also appear from published information that the accuracy of GPS is within about 50ft, or 15 metres, although part of the scientific backup of Wikipedia says 7 metres. My GPS I use on the car is considerably more accurate than that, at a guess I would have thought 2 to 3 metres at the most, when I drive thorough a roundabout it shows what appears to be the exact place in the layout, not 50ft away. The accuracy in part depends on how many satellites are visible, and generally the more there are, the more accurate it should be. It may be software within the unit that can then average out or track it to get closer. There are military systems using some additional or different satellites that are far more accurate, but these systems are not used in the commercial products we buy. At any time there are about 32 satellites in use, some working more accurately than others, although they do give out a confidence rating amongst the information they are transmitting base on known land positions. Although you need a minimum of 3 satellites to get a fix, the more you can see the better the position. About 5 is needed to get any reasonable accuracy. Weather and a wide range of other factors also affect it, large reflective buildings may also cause errors in readings. With most camera units I think its sampling, so as you move about it could be fractionally behind your current position, but near enough for all practical purposes. Some of the tests I have done using my GeopicII geotagger on a D300, and comparing the position on maps have been close but in some cases up to several hundred yards away from where I was stood, when I have looked the position given up on a map. This is close enough to allow me to know one location from another, but not to say what side I photographed an item from or similar. Is the error in the system, conditions, on the maps, or am I expecting too much from the technology we have available at this point. Having only recently spotted the errors on some photos I now need to run a more in depth test and comparison with my car satnav, and several mapping systems to get to the bottom of this. ---- So check for or watch out for another article on this soon. New equipment becoming available In the same way as we have new cameras out each
year, we see more Geotagging solutions coming out. This is in some ways still
very much a developing area. Nikon for example have a device, Nikon GP1 its
shown We are working on another page that will include links to each supplier, analysis of prices and more, but we haven't managed to track down all the information yet to complete this, so watch the newsletter for it to be announced when complete. This will also include software and other solutions as well. Now you have the data, what next There are a range of GPS formats in existence, most just representing different ways to write the same information and to different levels of accuracy. In effect different numbers of decimal places. Some of these were defined in Wikipedia, other variations on this you will come across, but from these will generally makes sense.
On a Nikon camera using the metadata, we get 2 formats displayed in the Nikon software, and on the camera. For example on one of my photos it shows Latitude N51° 27.874' (51° 27' 47.1") Longitude W3° 9.921' (3° 9' 55.3") Altitude 11.00m. This is a statue in Cardiff Bay. Loading this photo into Photoshop Elements and looking under file/fileinfo/advanced and then expanding the Exif data it shows Latitude 51,27.874N Longitude 3,9.921W Altitude 11/1 it also tells me this was based on seeing 7 satellites. From this you can see information is not always represented the same. In neither system can I do anything directly with this, I can't edit it, or copy it. We will come back to editing software a little later on this page. From what I have read I think its held within the RAW Exif data simply as degrees, going to 5 decimal places, and the other displays we see is the result of the software reading it, so we might get to see the same picture giving slightly different output in different editors or viewers. From the information on accuracy above you can see there may be other considerations as well. Finding the position on maps If we go to
Google maps
A simple to use
calculator and display tool is at
boulter.com/gps/
There is a page on a
website at
www.nearby.org.uk/coord-ll.cgi
Multimap.
Streetmap
So N51° 27.874' W3° 9.921' is perhaps entered entered as N27:27.874,W03:09.921, but this does not work, it also doesn't work if I take the decimals out. The other format I have N51° 27' 47.1 W3° 9' 55.3 should in theory be entered as N51:27:47,W03:09:55, this does work and produces a map showing a point not far away.Microsoft Live maps say they will find a location by latitude and longitude, but don't say the format it is entered in. All the formats I tried don't work. In another section under instructions to build your own parameters, latitude and longitude can be used, but if you use the format from here, guessing what is not told to you, I still could not get a result. Image storing systems If you add photos to
flicker
A number of other storage systems and some of the bookmarking systems can also store Geotagging information. From editing software to maps I can't find anything in Photoshop Elements, beyond being able to read the location, Capture NX2 likewise shows the location data only. I have been told these will both work with other software to link to maps, but I haven't yet worked out how. In the future, I would expect that all viewing and editing software will have a button that when pressed gives you a choice of what mapping system you want to see the location and then provide it. The component parts to do this are already available, it just needs to be included. Where we have reached Wikipedia, Flicker and a variety of other sites make a lot of use of Geotagged information, but at the moment for us to use it directly from our photographs is still not that easy, mostly because there is no standardised way to display or enter the information, and instructions and ease of use is still poor. You can use it, but its a struggle. I would suggest that starting from
Google maps
We have two other pages we are working on, but is not yet available, one looking in detail at accuracy, the other looking at the range off equipment with links to suppliers, and more. We may also break up this page into several and expand each section. What do you know, what is your experience of Geotagging, let us know.
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