OpenStreetMap

Aerial Imagery Verticality Meter

Posted by Milliams on 19 September 2009 in English.

As some of may know, OSM recently collected it's very first set of aerial imagery from a privately hired plane. It's all happening because Stratford-upon-Avon is hosting the big AGI GIS conference (23-24 Sept) and this makes an excellent showcase and will improve the map of the area a lot. If this is news to you then read up on it at the list posting. The flight was paid for by ITO World and Traveline and the photographs were taken by John R. Peterson.

We now have a huge selection of images from the area where some are very good quality vertical shots and some are much more angled shots. Some people have already started rectifying some of them and stitching them together to be used as a background in the editors. However, given the spectrum of quality someone requested that we find a way to tag all the images in terms of their suitability so that the best ones can be laid on top of the less good ones.

To this purpose I wrote a script in PHP so that people can view each image and tag it according to its suitability. You can visit it at http://milliams.com/verticalitymetre and help out rating the images. You can see statistics of the images rated so far as well as view the ratings on a map.

Get tagging and if anyone has any ideas for improvement then let me know.

Location: Stratford-upon-Avon, Stratford-on-Avon, Warwickshire, England, United Kingdom

Discussion

Comment from Philip on 21 September 2009 at 15:08

This is great. Can I suggest you specify you require the 'angle at the centre of the photo' for the verticality meter? On wider shots, it may be vertical at the bottom of the photo and very oblique at the top. Also, would the useful to have a little image of the approximate angle range next to each option - your idea of 'More oblique but still likely good enough for rectifying' may be quite different to mine :)

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