So, you can certainly find a place to plug your data. Maybe a question is “just how standard is standard”? Is this just for Google use, or applicable to GDAL or GeoTIFF or other environments too?
W. Kemp Watson Objective Pathology Services Toronto, Canada http://www.objectivepathology.com [email protected] tel. +1 (647) 783-4431 > On May 12, 2022, at 3:16 PM, Even Rouault <[email protected]> wrote: > > > Simon, > > as you operate on the geospatial field where GDAL is omnipresent, you could > potentially add arbitrary GDAL metadata items, like START_DATE and END_DATE, > in the GDAL_METADATA xml TIFF tag > (https://www.awaresystems.be/imaging/tiff/tifftags/gdal_metadata.html) > > Even > > Le 12/05/2022 à 20:59, Simon (Vsevolod) Ilyushchenko a écrit : >> Kemp, >> >> On Thu, May 12, 2022 at 11:54 AM Kemp Watson <[email protected]> >> wrote: >>> Hi Simon: >>> >>> Speaking from close to no knowledge here... >>> >>> Is it that critical to know both start and end times of an export? Can you >>> perhaps average them to one value? >> >> It's fairly critical- we mostly work with raster Earth imagery, and, >> especially for meteo data, it's important to know whether an image covers >> one hour or one day. >> >>> >>> Can you assume DateTime is UTC with your particular files and use cases? >> >> Yes, this is a good fallback option. >> >> Best, >> Simon >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Tiff mailing list >> [email protected] >> https://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/tiff > -- > http://www.spatialys.com > My software is free, but my time generally not.
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