sounds like a great way to use a gps!!! jason Jim Scotti wrote: > Photography and GPS are a wonderful combination. There's a not very > active Yahoo!Group called Geographing which combines the two that might be > worth checking out. I think some careful notetaking on when your photos were > taken that includes the GPS measured coordinates and a direction is a great > idea and one that is even easier with a digital camera. If you keep your > digital camera's clock reasonably accurate, you can do a lot of back checking > using your tracklog for most of your photos - and you don't have to think > about it too much, just to leave your GPS on and tracking while your are > exploring and photographing. Along with a couple of waypoints for special > photos and calibration, you should be able to reconstruct the location of > almost all your images, at least while the GPS is on and tracking satellites. > I've done that with one hike, but haven't gone much farther with it - yet. > As for what GPS, well, almost any will do. I like my Garmin Legend whose > maps really help in a lot of circumstances (using MapSource Roads and Rec > and/or Topo is my prefered). It's recent firmware upgrade that expanded the > number of waypoints and trackpoints really makes it wonderful to be able to > use both for keeping track of where your photos were taken (not to mention > for geocaching). Its compass, however, depends on recent motion of the > reciever, so a reciever with a built in compass might be preferable if she > wants to include direction of photo a little more reliably. > The biggest problem I've had in combining GPS and camera is just good old > organization and record keeping. I'm still trying to find the best way of > organizing my digital pictures (the old notebook with slides or > transperancies worked pretty well, but with smaller numbers of images, it > wasn't hard to keep track of the images I wanted - I need some sort of > database scheme to keep track of my digital images.... Including more > information like location, time, direction, and other notes in such a > database should not be too hard to do. > > Jim. > > On Wed, 30 Apr 2003, gale and mike wrote: > > >>A friend of mine sent me an e-mail recently. A coworker of his is a >>photography buff. She is interested in getting her own GPS to use with >>her photography. She does a lot of landscapes and nature photography and >>wants to be able to find places again. Is anyone out there a photographer >>and use their GPS like that? Any recommendations on what GPS she should >>get? > > > Jim Scotti > Lunar & Planetary Laboratory > University of Arizona > Tucson, AZ 85721 USA http://www.lpl.arizona.edu/~jscotti/ > > ____________________________________________________________ > Az-Geocaching mailing list listserv@azgeocaching.com > To edit your setting, subscribe or unsubscribe visit: > http://listserv.azgeocaching.com/mailman/listinfo/az-geocaching > > Arizona's Geocaching Resource > http://www.azgeocaching.com