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The Geotaggers’ World Atlas

4621770959 383261aebe The Geotaggers World Atlas

Eric Fischer has conducted some interesting studies of major world cities by re-mapping them according to the frequency of geo-tagged images sourced from both Flickr and Picasa. His method is not exactly clear but I assume the vector information is generated by joining a single user’s individual snaps in order of sequence. The product is something of considerable beauty and may help to pre-empt the spatial extent of computing such information via programmes such as GRAIL’s Building Rome in a Day project, as demonstrated in their animation of San Marco Square, Rome. The image underlay is extracted from the OpenStreetMap dataset.

4671589629 c4ec2cc42b The Geotaggers World Atlas

In addition Fischer has conducted a second study aimed at differentiating between photos taken by locals and tourists, which he demarcates as follows:

Blue points on the map are pictures taken by locals (people who have taken pictures in this city dated over a range of a month or more).

Red points are pictures taken by tourists (people who seem to be a local of a different city and who took pictures in this city for less than a month).

Yellow points are pictures where it can’t be determined whether or not the photographer was a tourist (because they haven’t taken pictures anywhere for over a month).

About George

George Metcalfe recently graduated with Distinction as Master of Architecture from the WSA. A freelance designer and multi-creative, he is interested in the intersection between architecture, urbanism and information communication technology.
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