Old news but still worth mentioning that Blogging is even easier than ever. You can now use MS word to write your blogger blog posts.
Category: Technology
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Blogger For MS Word
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More Japanamazingness
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Print Flickr Pictures
Qoop Beta + Flickr Beta = Flickr picture books and posters. I haven’t purchased anything from this service so I can’t speak to the quality/service levels but it looks awesome.
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Automatically Geotag your pictures
Wikipedia: "GeoTagging, also known as GeoCoding, is the process of adding geographical identification metadata to various media such as websites, RSS feeds or images. This data usually consists of latitude longitude coordinates, though it can also include altitude and placenames."
Lots of people have started GeoTagging their images on Flickr and then looking at them on Google Maps and Google Earth. As of this post there are about 58 000 images on Flickr that have been "geotagged." I thought this was pretty cool so I wanted to figure out how do it automagically. How can I geotag my images without having to do it manually?
If you want to manually geotag your images in Flickr check out Phillip Torrone’s how-to over at Make. However if you want to know how to do it in a somewhat automated fashion read on mofo.
I think this is as close as you can get to automatically GeoTagging your images in Flickr without actually having a GPS built into your camera. The process works by combining the time-stamp of your image with the tracks from your GPS. In other words the time your pictures were taken just needs to be synced with your GPS tracks. I’ve only figured out how to do this on Windows so far. See the comments for an update on how to do it on a Mac.
What you need:
- Digital Camera
- GPS Unit
- Flickr Account
- WWMX Location Stamper
- Expert GPS
- Flickr Importr
- Google Earth
Here’s how you do it:
- Set the date and time on your digital camera. Use the time on your GPS.
- Go out with your GPS set to record it’s tracks and take some pictures.
- Once you get home offload your pictures into a folder on your PC.
- Download the tracks from your GPS into Expert GPS.
- Save the tracks as a .gpx file.
- Open the WWMX Location Stamper.
- Add all the photos. Menu: Photos, Add Photos…
- Add Tracks. Menu: Tracks, Add Tracks (the .gpx)
- Highlight all the pictures and hit Apply tracks. This inserts the Longitude and Latitude coordinates into the EXIF metadata of the images.
- Open the Flickr Importr.
- Add all the pics (notice the geotags automagically generated)
- Upload all the pics using Flickr Importr
The interesting part is viewing your images in Google Earth or on Google Maps. But first open Google Earth and open the .gpx file from your GPS. This will overlay your tracks from your GPS overtop of the satelitte imagery in Google Earth.
Now in order to view your own geotagged Flickr images in Google Earth click on the URL below courtesy of Geobloggers.
http://www.geobloggers.com/googleEarthGeoRSS.cfm?sUsername=YOURFLICKRUSERNAMEFor example to view my Geotagged images in Google Earth I would use this URL:
http://www.geobloggers.com/googleEarthGeoRSS.cfm?sUsername=TheLastMinuteThis will give you a kml file and just open it and it will launch Google Earth and take you to your geotagged pictures. So you should now see your Geotagged images and your GPS tracks on Google Earth. Keep in mind Geobloggers.com is getting popular very quickly so their servers might be a little unstable.
When you get bored of looking at your own images use this link to view other people’s pictures in Google Earth:
http://www.geobloggers.com/feeds/flickr.kmlHere’s a list of videos that have been geotagged using del.icio.us:
http://www.vlogmap.org/i/data/vlogmap_geovlogged.kmzYou get the idea… "the map is the interaface"
What about other cool places in Google Earth?
http://www.googlesightseeing.com/mapfiles/networklink.kmlTo view your images using Google Maps inside Flickr download Firefox, install greasemonkey, then install the GMIF extension and hit the GMAP button on one of your Geotagged Images.
This whole process is different from just adding geotags on Flickr for one important reason. This
process actually adds the coordinates to the EXIF metadata of the image
itself. What this means is that the image itself will always contain
those coordinates wherever it goes from now on. It doesn’t just have
tags on Flickr.
So in the future when Google Earth is merged with Picasa or My Life
Bits is built into Windows the metadata (gps coordinates in this case)
stays with the pictures themselves and you’ll be able to do cool stuff
with it. Iphoto will probably still suck by then so don’t even bother…I figure it won’t be long before your communication/media capture
device (the uber device) becomes location
aware. Your cell phone is already somewhat location aware because it
know which cell phone tower its communicating with. Eventually your
uber device will do this entire process for you. That is, it will add
as much automatically generated metadata as possible at the point of
media capture including GPS coordinates. So you can be a huge nerd and do all this now or wait for the uber communication device. I choose nerd.It’s funny that in order to make all of this work The United States Government Department of Defense (GPS), Microsoft (WWMX Location Stamper), Yahoo (Flickr), and Google (Google Earth and Maps) all had to play nice together.
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Google Talk
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Google IM ?
Where Does Google Plan to Spend $4 Billion? – New York Times.
‘Google executives say they plan to unveil on Wednesday a "communications tool" that is potentially a clear step beyond the company’s search-related business focus.’
UPDATE: Google Talk IM was what they came out with…
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Most Interesting Pictures
Before Flickr introduced their interestingness/explore feature if you just browsed by tag you’d get random pictures associated with that tag. But now you can browse only the good ones as deemed by their interestingness o’ meter.
Looking for a good slideshow of puppies?
flickr.com/photos/tags/puppy/interesting/showor of funny pics?
flickr.com/photos/tags/funny/interesting/showor of Nerds
flickr.com/photos/tags/nerds/interesting/show
(note the pic Bill took of the powerbooks at Trees Cafe is on the list)Just remove the /show at the end to see the pics in non-slideshow mode.
Or if you want to just see awesome pics from the last 24 hours go here:
flickr.com/explore/interesting/24hoursOr browse by calendar:
flickr.com/explore/interesting/2005/08You can also see which of your own photos are "interesting."
flickr.com/photos/YOURUSERNAME/popular-interestingEnjoy the interestingness!
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Google Maps In Flickr : GMIF
This is an example of the Firefox Greasemonkey extension called GMIF in action. What it does is allow you to see your (or other people’s) geotagged Flickr images on Google Maps from within Flickr. Sweet.
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Flickr Signin BS
Soon you’ll be forced to use your spam ridden Yahoo! account to login to Flickr… Are we already on the slippery slope towards Flickr suckage? [via]
"Please note that we will be migrating all independent
Flickr accounts to Yahoo!’s network in 2006. At that time, if you have
not done so already, you will be asked to create a Yahoo! ID (or link
your account to your Yahoo! ID if you already have one) in order to
continue using your account. We’ll provide further details about the
merge as the date approaches."
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We are the Weeb
The Netscape IPO wasn’t really about dot-commerce. At its heart was a
new cultural force based on mass collaboration. Blogs, eBay, open
source, peer-to-peer behold the power of the people.
"…Three thousand years from now, when keen minds review the past, I
believe that our ancient time, here at the cusp of the third
millennium, will be seen as another such era.In the years roughly
coincidental with the Netscape IPO, humans began animating inert
objects with tiny slivers of intelligence, connecting them into a
global field, and linking their own minds into a single thing. This
will be recognized as the largest, most complex, and most surprising
event on the planet.Weaving nerves out of glass and radio waves, our
species began wiring up all regions, all processes, all facts and
notions into a grand network. From this embryonic neural net was born a
collaborative interface for our civilization, a sensing, cognitive
device with power that exceeded any previous invention. The Machine
provided a new way of thinking (perfect search, total recall) and a new
mind for an old species. It was the Beginning."By Kevin Kelly