
Sometimes, I also like to take a photograph of the GPS screen with the time showing so that I can later compare the difference in their clocks.

I prefer to set the camera to UTC since then I don’t have to get into the hassle of changing camera time at the end of daylight savings or when I travel. You can either use UTC (popularly known as GMT) or your local time zone. At the start of the hike, set the camera clock to the time from the GPS.If you are walking, then a time interval of 6 seconds should give you maximum accuracy and in my case the tracklog won’t fill up to its maximum of 10,000 points for about 17 hours. The preferable mode is specifying the time interval. Auto mode tries to determine the optimal interval automatically, though Garmin does not provide any information about how it determines the optimum interval. Time and distance options are for specifying the time or distance respectively after which the GPS position should be recorded in the tracklog. Here is the procedure I use for the purpose: In addition, I can pinpoint the location where I took photographs and hence tag the photos with those coordinates (i.e., geotagging). This will provide me (and others) with a good record of different hikes. The idea is to record my position on the GPS while hiking (i.e., the tracklog).

Now that I have a GPS, I can have some fun with hiking and photography. WordPress: Now Watching plugin Children: Flashcards Open menu

GEOTAG PHOTOS ONLINE SOFTWARE
Here you’ll find the software and projects that I have worked on and released to the world. You can check out a lot of older photographs using the Photography category of my blog. Sometimes, he pesters invites his wife (Amber) and his friends to write on the blog too. He writes about whatever strikes his fancy on his blog, Procrastination.
