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Microsoft’s Pro Photo Tools 2; A Post-Exposure GPS Program
In photography, tracking the location of a shoot is almost as important as the shoot itself. One batch of mountain shots from New Zealand can get easily intermixed with those from Switzerland. Worse yet, for the outdoor photographer trying to manage a large number of photos, it’s almost impossible to figure out at a later date that you were in a state forest, not a state park, when you took an amazing photo of a rushing river and a deer poised to drink from a silent pool.
What seems like a minor problem can lead to major frustration as you try to remember exactly where you were. Metatag data can help, since some cameras offer a GPS add-on feature or at least an XMP sidecar tag for the metadata that holds the location name and description (as long as you remember to enter the information on the camera). For photographers with D-SLRs without those add-ons or features, or for those with a vast archive of photos, tracking location data is a constant challenge. Pro Photo Tools 2 Basics
At its core, Pro Photo Tools 2 is a batch-processing program. You can open an entire folder of photos, which are placed automatically in a thumbnail view. Those with no location data are then placed in a filmstrip view at the bottom of the screen. You can search for a location on a built-in map and simply drag all selected photos onto the map to apply the GPS data. The program adds a pin on the map to help you see visually where you took the photos, and adds GPS coordinates in the metadata of the photo. You can click on the pin to see which photos are linked to that coordinate. Pro Photo Tools 2 allows you to switch between aerial, road, and hybrid (aerial/road) views to get your bearings on where the shoot took place.
At that point, the metadata is permanently part of each image file. So, I could open them in Lightroom 2 or some other photo-browsing application and search the metatag location. Pro Photo Tools 2 also allows you to manually enter other location data, such as the city name. That way, you can use a photo organizer such as ACDSee to search for photos you took in, say, Brazil. Or, if you upload images to an online hosting service such as Flickr, the metadata stays with every image and becomes searchable by location.
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