Thanx guys for the hint,
but this is a "serious" project ;)
My detail maps I have to produce are scattered around an area of ca. 200
sqkm, I want to have the freedom to design everything I want to with
overview maps for finding the spot, inserting already existing data etc.
So fieldpapers.org is nice, but doesn't bring me any convenience in my
QGIS-workflows.
Cheers
Bernd
Am 03.02.2018, 19:57 Uhr, schrieb Clifford Snow <[email protected]>:
Let me echo Brent Fraser suggestion to look at Field Papers,
fieldpaper.org. They accomplish what you are looking for. Each page >of
the field paper has a QR code for georeferencing. Not only that they can
be loaded in as a baselayer in OSM editors. The site >fieldpapers.org
has a simple walk through on how to go from nothing to pages loaded in
for digitizing.
If you are going to use Field Papers with different surveyors from those
who digitize the results, make sure you have a common >understanding of
symbols and notation the surveyors use. Otherwise digitizing may be
limited.
Hope this helps.
Clifford
On Sat, Feb 3, 2018 at 10:12 AM, Brent Fraser <[email protected]>
wrote:
Bernd,
Have you looked at Field Papers? http://fieldpapers.org/
Best Regards,
Brent Fraser
From: "Bernd Vogelgesang" <[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, February 3, 2018 9:22 AM
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Subject: [Qgis-user] Idea: Crowd-sourcing a batch-georeferencer plugin
withQR code ?
Hi folks,
I am facing a project, where I will produce hundreds of field maps with
atlas from lots of small locations, which get printed for surveyors to
fill in observations in the field.
Getting them returned, I need to scan them, georeference them and
finally
digitize the features found.
Alone thinking of the process of georeferencing all those scans (which
might only have tiny offsets and shifts because of lousy scanners) make
me
wish to have chosen another profession ...
So here is the idea:
An atlas plugin, that will automatically distribute minimum 6
cross-hairs
(or other automatically identifiable features) around your atlas canvas.
A QR-Code is generated, which holds the coordinates, EPSG and name of
the
atlasfeature, and which is put in some restricted area of the composer
map.
Maps are printed, processed and scanned afterwards.
Batch-import all scans.
Another function reads the QR-Code of the scan, identifies to locator
features, gives them the proper coordinates and automatically creates
georeferenced tiff/png/jpg with the name of the atlas feature.
Sounds like a dream, but I think there should be enough dreamers around
to
make this one true.
Any ideas if this will work, and how to start this endeavour?
Cheers,
Bernd
--
Bernd Vogelgesang
Siedlerstraße 2
91083 Baiersdorf/Igelsdorf
Tel: 09133-825374
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--@osm_seattle
osm_seattle.snowandsnow.us
OpenStreetMap: Maps with a human touch
--
Bernd Vogelgesang
Siedlerstraße 2
91083 Baiersdorf/Igelsdorf
Tel: 09133-825374
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