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Geo-tagging photos on the iPhone: feature added, killed.

I love taking photos with my phone. Phone cameras turn you into a mobile content generation unit. Snap photo, upload, the world knows. Never mind the fact that the world knows about your cat being cute or your son's nose being very congested. Phone cameras become double powerful when coupled with the phone's GPS. The GPS stamps each photo's EXIF data, the same metadata that records when you took the picture, with where you did it. So in essence, you need two elements: upload and location-recording capabilities. My Nokia N95 had both capabilities. Great camera, GPS, uploads to Flickr and Nokia's Ovi. Then Nokia stopped developing apps for the phone, which is very disappointing. Its general slowness and the arrival of the iPhone 3Gs convinced me to move on. The iPhone compensates for middling camera hardware with speed and processing power. And it had a stellar app called PixelPipe. PixelPipe batch uploaded my photos and videos to any site I wanted. And little did I appreciate it at the time, but it also retained and uploaded the geotagging data from photos. Pixelpipe was recently removed from the iPhone's app store. Apparently it accessed photos using the wrong element (in Apple's eyes) of the iPhone SDK. That made the app better for batch uploads, but played against 'the rules'. So I was left looking for alternatives. Without mentioning all of them, Flickr's app is the most disappointing to me. Flickr's app's beautiful design, sensible usability, stable, but with one (probably imposed) 'feature' bug: it tags whatever photos it uploads with the location of *the upload*. In other words, if you took the photo in Japan and uploaded it in Omaha as- Mt. Fuji will be geotagged as being in Nebraska. Now why would Flickr, a great Website I love and pay for, do such a boneheaded thing? Because apparently that's the best the iPhone allows. It seems like the iPhone SDK forces developers to access photos using specific APIs that remove the location data from images. If you actually take a picture and then upload it immediately using the Flickr app allows the app to append the currrent location back to the photo. Absurd, no? So what's left? iPhoto and other desktop applications that get the actual phtoto files from the iPhone can still get the location data from the actual files. But on the iPhone, Apple made the wrong decision to remove that information. Privacy may be the concern. I am, for one, disappointed and a bit angry. I doubt Android imposes such a limitation on apps. But to follow Steve Jobs' logic from an email, I'd better create than criticize.

UPDATE:

Manage to restore PixelPipe from iTunes. It is the good version that was removed by Apple. Amazingly enough, having tweeted about it, PixelPipe asked me to send them their own iPhone app file. Probably for use with jailbroken iPhones. A bit surprising that they, of all people, will not have an old version of their own app. Still, glad I solved it by going around Apple's own restrictions. Geotagging is back for me.

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Photo apps I love on the iPhone

If there was a one compelling feature to my Nokia N95-8GB it was its excellent camera. Photos in 5 megapixel resolution were crisp and nice, and the premise of video was always reassuring to have. Until videos started to stutter and general slow response time made it difficult to snap photos of my kids. The iPhone was not an option until the 3Gs model came out with a just-good-enough 3.2MP camera with video capability. The 2 year plus age difference between phones helped with CPU speed too – video on the iPhone is a reality. And like the N95, the iPhone geotags photos you take. That, intersecting with Nokia developing updates to newer versions of its Symbian OS and abandoning the N95 made my transition away to the iPhone simple. (N95 for sale, btw)

Yes, the iPhone camera is far from perfect. While the touchscreen is a phenomenal interface for setting the focal point for a photo, I would love having a photo timer or a way to reliably take self-photos without fumbling for the touchscreen photo button. Yet the iPhone’s photo apps make it so much better.

For about $10 (if you buy them on sale periods) these apps give you phenomenal versatility. The following is a not comprehensive review of the apps I bought and love.

PhotoGene
This app is a basic photo editor with the functionality you would most likely need and then some. This includes trim and rotate, contrast and saturation, basic filters, frames and title insertion. Very useful.

Pano
I love panorama photography. Getting full landscapes in a photo always gives you a much stronger impact and memory of the moment you were there. Pano is a straightforward tool that makes panoramic photos happen. You choose landscape or portrait orientation and start snapping photos from left to right. Overlap is simplified through a ghost image of the last photo you shot that is superimposed on the current view. Saved in full size as a total of its constituent shots, no skimpy resize. Love it!

CameraBag
This one is more of a play on photos that need extra help moving them from just bad to artistic. You can choose from 8 effect bundles to apply to your photo, including Lomo-like, 60s and 70s camera effects and others. Lots of fun mutilating iPhone camera mishaps or just any photo.
Fun.

TiltShift Generator
TiltShift photos make real photos look like they were actually toy or model images. For the real thing you could plunk hundreds of dollars for a tilt shift lens. There are also Photoshop tutorials on faking it and now there’s an iPhone app. It teaches you how to use its settings, tweaking photos to get the macimum effect. Well designed use of the touchscreen and plenty fun to use.

Which ones do you recommend?

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