
If you photograph the QRCode, do you still need the.And my phone is sitting on my computer desk.

My trip is finished, so it shouldn't be adding new data.
#Gps4cam a7r code#
In fact, if I just leave the 'Offline mode' pop-up displaying, the bar code is changing in the background. But, after the pop-up clears, the QRCode changes every few seconds. So, I assume, that I just click the background where the code is showing around the pop-up menu to implement my choices. When I click on the QRCode option, a pop-up appears which asks what should be stored in the code.The trip menu choice shows it as 'exported'. I did a test trip and generated a 'trip' menu item. I'm experimenting with the Lite version to learn how it works. That can all happen on the computer if you wish. As the app maker suggests, I use the desktop app to write the metadata while the images are still on their camera card when connected to my computer, then import them to a hard drive location. The helper app does not import the images, you need to do that by other means. When at home, do you import the photos to your HD or do you have to use the helper app to import the photos? I guess what I'm trying to get at is how does it take the information from the QR code and imprint that data onto the image files? The QR codes stay on the phone until you delete them, so you can choose when to photograph them. You can control the length of the trip and pause the recording during periods when you are not moving and/or photographing. Shoot as normal with your digital camera.Īt the end of the trip (or do you do this after each day separately?), take a photo of the QR code.Įach trip produces a QR code that you need to photograph.
#Gps4cam a7r full#
I find that the standard setting at five minute intervals drains my iPhone's charge about 50% in a full day of use with the WiFi turned off. Yes, there are several levels of tracking precision available. You open the app on your iPhone and it begins tracking your day (I'm guessing that this is a big drain on GPS) But I did see you can adjust the interval or perhaps even pause it. gpx file into Lightroom which displays the track in its Map mode along with flags for any associated images that you have selected. Once on your hard drive, you can import the. gpx file that you can email to yourself from your phone. The track shown on the map is contained in a. No, the desktop app extracts the recorded locations from the QR code and writes them into the metadata of your images.

Does the desktop app/helper create that map for you? First of all, thank you for your responses and your insight. You've really sparked my interest in this app.
