Ipernity’s Geotagging feature employs Google maps and is clearly superior to ... what we were used to. The hybrid mode, especially, makes identifying motifs a lot easier, and you’ll be able to differentiate between objects which, in real life, are only a few yards apart.
Unfortunately, that’s not all there is to it.
It’s all very fine if your image focuses on only one thing: just taggit! (and don’t ask yourself if it makes much sense to geotag a tulip). But what if there are more? What if there are a great many? Sometimes, you could fix your tag to a single object, if it is prominent enough: the Eiffel Tower or Mississippi River. But you won’t always be as lucky as that.
Suppose you have a panorama shot: it shows the tops of the trees on the other side of the road, the wide valley of the river that happens to flow past your village, and also a chain of mountains far, far away. This example is purely hypothetical, of course.
Now where do you put your tag?
I wouldn’t know. You could use a small scale view of the map, and place the tag where all three elements –trees, valley, mountains– are covered. That wouldn’t satisfy me, but you might argue that you have determined a certain “average”. Alternatively, it could be your own location, if it can be identified. However, this would revalue an habitual location, for instance your balcony, in a way that you may not always be able to choose between the two criteria: you may have shot a particular building both from your balcony and from the street, isn’t it?
I find this all very difficult. Still, though I occasionally do have a bad conscience, I like the feature a lot. Somehow, it puts the obscurest of places on the map (quite literally) and thus ranks them among metropoles. And you also learn something, for instance, where your friends are at home...
I looked up one of my dearest Fl..., no, Ipernity friends. She appeared to live on a crossroads in Evansville, Indiana, probably trying to flag a ride (yes, I know my Robert Johnson!). She hasn’t deserved to live on the street –it really made me sad...
We’ve become so international that we experience typically Dutch habits as exotic now: none of my “restricted” pictures would exist without opaque curtains drawn...
As to your “btw”:
You must understand this is a public place, and I can’t express my true feelings as freely as I’d do on a personal level. Now I’m replying just to you, and I can tell you: You are more than a friend, much more than one of my dearest friends in whatever context ... you are the only woman in my life.
In a way, I feel sorry for my wife, daughter, and mother, but the truth must be told. (Billy Wilder once advised never to tell an actress she was “the very best”, but always she was “one of the two best” –clever! This is not the time for evasiveness, though.)
If someone else should incidentally read this: it’s a matter of bondage, nothing less. Laugh at me ... call me an idiot –I’ll gladly bear it. For Sherry’s sake.
I CAN'T BREATHE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
only woman??? how bout only person???? LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL
OMG!!!!
Cora you and your mother...pay NO attention to us...Kees is merely trying to one up me on our bizarre humor...and of course as always he has totally succeeded!!! LOL LOL LOL LOL *still trying to catch breath* ;-DDDD
Oh wait! There’s Robbie! (Neutered, but wasn’t our fault.)
OK, but you rank immediately after him! :-)
*still trying to catch breath* LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL
I also find “geotagging” a bore sometimes, especially when we’ve made a trip and I’m a bit disoriented (both at the actual place and in retrospect). It works best for me when I tag the villages where I was born and where I live now. It helps organize repetitive pictures and create a virtual reality of sorts; the “strolls through Icking” (in the Icking Group on ... the other site), for instance, serve the same purpose. I take people who have never been there by the hand and show them how things are, the good and the not-so-good things.
I don’t know if other people like it, but it gives me a strange kind of satisfaction.
I’m pretty sure that the Dutch who leave the curtains open at night belong to the nothing-to-hide category. When I show visitors around the house, figuratively speaking, I am very similar to them, but wouldn’t pretend I’ve got nothing to hide: I’m only cheating, and would never show the sado-maso room in the basement!
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