Posts Tagged ‘maps’


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Stolen Camera Finder Finds Stolen Cameras

Drag a photo onto the box and it will search for other pictures with your camera’s serial number
If you lose your phone or your computer, there’s a fair chance you’ll get it back if you’re using some kind of tracking software. As we have seen before, Apple’s Find my iPhone service has rescued more than one lost phone. But what about your other gadgets?
If your camera is stolen, you now have at least a chance of finding it thanks to the Stolen Camera Finder by Matt Burns. It works by searching the web for photos bearing the serial number of your camera. This number is embedded in the EXIF data of every photograph you take.
Using the tool is easy. Just visit the site and drag a photo from your camera onto the waiting box. The tool searches its database for your camera and if it finds it, you can then go see the pictures. This may — hopefully — give you some clues as to where it is now. You’ll need to use a JPG image (RAW doesn’t work) and some cameras don’t write their serial number into the metadata.
The data comes from Flickr, and also from data crawled from the web. Matt has also written a browser extension for Google Chrome which will check the serial number of photos on every page you visit and add it to the database.
I tried the tool with a photo from my camera, and nothing showed up. I have a ton of photos online, on both on Flickr and here at Wired.com, so I was expecting something. I guess that the service will increase in value as time passes and the database grows. Still, the service is free, and if nothing else it lets you view a whole lot of information about your photos in the drop-down list.
Stolen Camera Finder [Stolen Camera Finder via Photography Bay]
See Also:

Stolen Camera Finder Finds Stolen Cameras | Gadget Lab | Wired.com

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>Christchurch’s seismic fireworks, seen on Google Maps
13:58 22 February 2011

Michael Reilly, senior technology editor
ChristChurchQuakemap.jpg
ChristChurchQuakemap.jpg(Image: Whereis/Sensis PTY/TerraMetrics/Google)

The people of Christchurch are reeling after a devastating earthquake struck earlier today, the second powerful temblor to hit the city in the last five months. The internet and a global, up-to-the-minute news cycle allow us to wade through death tolls, images of city blocks in ruin, even live missing persons reports. Still, for those of us who live outside of earthquakes prone areas, can we know what it’s like to live in an area alive with seismic activity?

Paul Nicholls of the University of Canterbury in Christchurch wants to show us. Following the magnitude 7.1 quake in September, he set up Christchurch Quake Map, a new visualisation that brings home just how seismically restless his home city is.

The website combines Google Maps with data from GeoNet, New Zealand’s government-backed service for monitoring earthquakes, tsunamis, volcanic eruptions and other natural hazards.

The end product is something like a seismic fireworks display – a time-lapse of the nearly 49,000 earthquakes that have struck the region since 4 September. Running through the whole data set is a bit overwhelming, but zooming in on the last 24 hours paints a powerful picture of what it means to live through a big quake and its many, many aftershocks.

One Per Cent: Christchurch’s seismic fireworks, seen on Google Maps

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Check it out on The MasterTech Blog

>visual map of Foursquare check ins in 2010
Mapa de los check-ins en Foursquare
pretty cool!

check-ins from Foursquare in 2010
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