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[IsWhere - a FREE GeoTagging Utility] IsWHERE is a log of my thoughts, reflections, and news/blog links on the emergence of image and video geospatial tagging. Trends I want to try and follow are the various disruptions resulting from spatial smart-phones, how many GPS devices are out there, and other related news.

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Some related posts from Technorati and Google.

[Brian Croxall] Assignment: The “American Century” Geospatial Timeline « Brian Croxall: is the text that will be visible directly on the timeline.  It should be short: 3-6 words (where a title of a novel or poem can count as one word).  To make a title appear italicized, type it exactly like this (without the quotation marks): “AuthorName, <em>Book Title</em>”  Don’t worry about the fact that it doesn’t look italicized in the spreadsheet, and DON’T USE THE SPREADSHEET’S ITALICS FUNCTION!

[Nature Photography Blog] How To Geotag Your Photos: Each individual image of mine that is geotagged can be viewed in geospatial context in Google Earth, at the exact point on the globe where the photo was taken. The first of the two links below shows a detailed view of the photo on a boring web page, while the second link displays the image in Google Earth at the point in the Paria Vermillion Cliffs Wilderness where the Wave is situated and the photo was taken:

[TUI's Voice] Geotagging is dangerous ... 5 defences against cyberstalking ...: Wikipedia describes Geotagging as: the process of adding geographical identification metadata to various media such as photographs, video, websites, or RSS feeds, and a form of geospatial metadata. Essentially Cyber Stalking is where one person becomes infatuated with another and starts obsessively following them online.

[Beach Cities Media] The Nouveau Art of Geotagging: Each Blue2CAN is bundled with IsWhere (Windows-only,) a software application that partners with Google Earth to verify and view on a map the location where geotagged images were photographed. Looking into the other geocoding method, .

[Technology Review RSS Feeds] Technology Review: Getting More from Location Data: On the go: A screenshot of Twittelator Pro, the first iPhone app to implement geotagging for Twitter. Credit: Andrew C.

[TechCrunch] Demo of iPhone Earth: (Which can also be synchronized with your iPhone in the same manner as your MP3s) Granted, this may use several GB of your storage, but most users who opt to do this will be able to view the areas they are likely to travel to 95% of the time without any network delays at all. If the imagery isn’t available, we can get it transparently over the network as needed, and cache it for the future.

[UXmatters] Where Are You Now? Design for the Location Revolution :: UXmatters: He is comparing pricing data in real time. While the point of the ad is that Lowe’s has the best price, the challenge, from a user experience perspective, is to figure out a way to provide the same data, without requiring family members to drive to different locations.

[Ogle Earth] Ogle Earth: Links: Ipoki, Geoflock, OS in GE, C-GPS2KML: I'd just hate to see another language end-up in the same use-scenario as HTML has all these years, where the common approach becomes total lack of sensativity toward semantics and functionality, and hacking it inappropriately, causing any range of problems associated with what we call 'code soup'. It's taken years to get anyone to recognize the value of semantics and the separation of content, style, and scripting -- I'd can't help but hesitate when I see the geo-spatial-heads rush to implement something without the considerations that some of us have experienced 100-times over in the web world all these years.

[UgoTrade] Visual Search, Augmented Reality and a Social Commons for the ...: Tish Shute: And this is the point of having these open infrastructures for this.  And this should be obvious in a way, but it comes back to the thing about what made the Internet great was the fact that even though as you note, you get an oligarchy like Facebook, but people always could just go off and do something else, right? Because the fundamental infrastructure was basically open and designed to be available for everyone.

[Ogle Earth] Ogle Earth: Catching up: Mindmaps to KML; Dutch censorship redux...: A turn of phrase in the blog post suggests Google is doing the blurring, though it's likely the author knows it is the Dutch state that insists on having the images censored before the aerial imaging company can release them. Unfortunately, a Poynter.org blogger rereporting ... I promise in-iPhoto geotagging using Google Earth is coming very soon. I've been busy but I'll make sure to get it out in some form this weekend. Posted by: Craig at 23:16 UTC, September 12, 2006 ...

[ZachBrowne.com] Great Web 2.0 Directory: Video Games Search Engine GameSkoot is a video games search engine dedicated to video games providing accurate and spam free information.

[TechConsumer] The Next Big Thing: Why Web 2.0 Isn't Enough | Info on nokia touch ...: The last time articles like these were being kicked around on Digg, it lead to an explosion in Web 2.0. We’re going to be hitting web 3.0 but there isn’t much to add since Web 2.0 basically shook everything up..I guess everything will just become more mobile.

[News] What the liberal elite feel you should know about 'Climate Change ...: After the successful introduction of three-dimensional geospatial platforms such as NASA World Wind, Google Earth and Microsoft Live Local 3D, achieving the vision of a Geospatial Web seems more realistic than ever. Dubbed the “holy grail of mapping” (Levy 2004), these geobrowsers aggregate and project layers of metadata onto scale-independent spherical globes.

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