Getting rid of more wires, middleware, and proprietary hardware
Beyond adding simple geotags, the Eye-Fi card can also be set to beam photos up to places like Facebook and Flickr, as soon as they're taken. This cuts out the need to haul around a computer with you if you're on vacation, since you can make edits later on down the line. The company's Explore X2 and Pro X2 cards are also able to automatically hop on to AT&T Wi-Fi hotspots. All in all, this is a particularly more convenient system than what was previously possible on mobile phones that didn't have a Wi-Fi tethering mode. I, as well as my CNET colleague Stephen Shankland, had explored using an alternate geotagging method using an Android application called My Tracks. With it you could set your phone to record your GPS location as you moved around; it, in turn, would spit out a log of your whereabouts. Software like Apple's Aperture 3 had a handy feature that would let you drag and drop the GPS log from My Tracks into its library to have it map out that particular trip, then link it up to a "roll" of photos you had taken. Apple's implementation of it was not automated though; you still had to tell it where you started taking photos, and pick that particular shot. From there, it would assign GPS coordinates to the rest of the photos in that roll based on when you took the shots.Free Android apps like My Tracks can record your travels as a GPS log that can be used to add geodata to photos, but it sometimes requires pricey software or many extra steps.(Credit: Stephen Shankland / CNET)
The downsides and fine print
While the wireless system works with great harmony, there are a few downsides--the primary one being cost. The system I was using, which utilized the unlocked AT&T Nexus One, and an Eye-Fi Explore 8GB SD card, totaled close to $700 after taxes (not including cellular phone service or the price of the camera). Then again, the most expensive part of that combo doubles as a very functional mobile phone. To get the same system to work on your Android phone you're going to need a recent model that will be upgraded to the 2.2 firmware, as well as a carrier plan that's tethering friendly. HTC's EVO 4G, which is due to be released on Sprint's network this Friday, includes the feature but charges users $30 a month for it. Others who get the 2.2 update may simply get it, unless their carrier and OEMs have opted to keep it out of the software update. There are also third-party applications like PDA Net that can turn your pre-2.2 Android phone into a Wi-Fi hotspot for $19. Those who don't have an Android phone can achieve similar results with a standalone Wi-Fi hotspot product like the MyFi or Sprint Overdrive. There are also a handful of other smartphones that offer the hotspot feature, like Palm's Pre and Pixi Plus, though again these options can be just as expensive in the long run when taking into account service contracts and up-front hardware costs.The free way
Many online services like Picasa and Flickr, and software like iPhoto (which comes free with new Macs), let you do a simple search on a map to add this data to your shots. If you were visiting a landmark at the time, this is easy. The hard part is trying to remember where you were in an old photo without some sort of geo identifier. In the case of using a local software program, the geotag is actually added to that source file's metadata, so it will come along with it when you upload it to an online service, or offload it to a backup drive. The camera phone route
If you already have a smart phone with a camera that records geodata, it's worth taking a quick snap with it if you're shooting any photos in that area with your regular camera. Consider it like a tracer round, just to get a record of you being there. Then, when you get back to a computer, there are plenty of ways to pull that information from the camera phone photos over to your other shots. For more on that, check out my CNET colleague Stephen Shankland's 2007 story "My geotagging trials, travails, and tribulations," which is still startlingly up-to-date a little less than three years later.One thing to note is that these two options may be free, however the main joy of a wireless and instant geotagging system is that it ends up being less work when you get back to your computer. And in the case of using a mobile hotspot and the Eye-Fi card system, you can cut the computer out of the equation completely. Built-in GPS in point and shoots as well as DSLRs is destined to one day be a standard feature. But in the meantime, you'll be hard-pressed to find a solution that's as versatile, or as individually useful, as the Eye-Fi and a Wi-Fi hotspot cellphone. Separately they are good, but together they are great.Update: Changed the number of photos uploaded to Flickr during the summer months. Also, reader NoToSpam suggests Sony's GPS-CS3KA in the comments. It provides a similar GPS logging function to My Tracks, but without the need to use a phone. It works with Sony's digital cameras and camcorders.Related:
Megazoom with GPS star of five Samsung camera announcements
Apple improves editing, GPS with Aperture 3.0.3
Cameras with built-in geotagging on horizon
Camera with GPS logger could help collect crash data
Source: CNET News (http://cnet.com/)
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