geospatial metadata 2025-11-06T16:07:25Z
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Rain lashed against the Bay Area apartment windows as I fumbled with the keybox at 6:45AM, my coffee thermos slipping from my trembling hands. Another tenant abandonment case - the third this month - and the sinking dread hit before I even turned the knob. Last time, they'd vanished with the vintage chandelier claiming "it was broken anyway," leaving me holding a $3,000 repair order and zero photographic proof. My fingers hovered over the door, already anticipating the carnage: scuffed floors di -
Midway through documenting endangered alpine flora, my world collapsed into digital silence. Sierra Nevada's granite jaws clamped down on all signals – no GPS pings, no frantic calls for backup. Just wind howling through juniper shrubs and the sickening void in my tablet screen. Three days of painstakingly mapped microhabitats evaporated before my eyes. I’d gambled on mainstream mapping apps; their offline modes failed like paper umbrellas in a hailstorm. Crouching behind a boulder with numb fin -
Rain lashed against my office window last Thursday as I stared at the crimson "OVERDUE" stamps mocking me from three different planners. My thumb scrolled through disjointed reminders: client reports buried under grocery lists, vet appointments drowning in meeting alerts. That's when Mia DM'd me a screenshot - her phone displaying vibrant coral reefs where "email tax docs" should've been. "Try this madness," her message blinked, "it turns drudgery into treasure maps." -
Swiss granite bit into my palms as I clawed up the scree slope, lungs burning with thin air. Dawn's golden promise had curdled into a suffocating fog that erased trails and horizons alike. Below my boots, a 300-meter drop vanished into white oblivion. Prayer time was closing in, and panic tasted like copper on my tongue. Not just for my safety – Dhuhr was approaching, and I was stranded in a disorienting void without a compass or clue. -
Wind screamed like a wounded animal as my pickup shuddered on that godforsaken Alberta lease road last winter. Ice crystals tattooed my windshield faster than the wipers could fight back, reducing the world to a suffocating white void. My knuckles ached from strangling the steering wheel - third hour circling this frozen hell, diesel gauge kissing empty. Somewhere beneath these snowdrifts lay Rig 42, my destination. Somewhere. Panic tasted metallic as I envisioned sleeping in this steel coffin o -
vialytics ToDovialytics is an intelligent Road Management System, consisting of a smartphone app and a web app. With the here shown vialytics smartphone app, municipalities can easily create and manage georeferenced tasks or assets, and automatically document their regular track controls or winter services.To use the app, a registered account is necessary.Recommended system requirements: Min. 4 GB RAM -
NextGIS CollectorThis app lets you collect data in the field. 1. Ask your administrator to set up a data collection project2. Run NextGIS Collector3. Sign in using NextGIS ID account (get one at http://my.nextgis.com)4. If you have data collection projects - you'll see them and will be able to join in.5. Start collecting!All your data will be stored at nextgis.comThe app is the companion for NextGIS Premium. If you're an administrator, you need to switch to Premium before you're able to use it h -
Coordinates - GPS FormatterSimple and easy-to-use app for determining coordinates in various formats.## Simple Design ##Just locate your position in the center of the screen (where the gray line intersects), and the result will appear instantly, or you can manually enter a value! It's also possible -
Rain lashed against my study window as I traced a finger along cracked spines of forgotten worlds. That tattered Murakami paperback? Abandoned midway when work deadlines swallowed February. The pristine Orwell hardcover? A birthday gift I'd sworn to start last summer. My shelves whispered accusations of literary betrayal, each dust-coated volume a monument to fractured attention spans. That Thursday evening, I snapped a photo of my chaos for Instagram – a digital scream into the void about #Read -
That Tuesday night started with my skull buzzing from spreadsheet hell. I craved Bill Evans' "Waltz for Debby" like a lifeline, but opening Spotify felt like drinking flat soda. Scattered playlists, sterile interface – my jazz collection might as well have been alphabetized soup cans. Then I tapped Roon's obsidian icon, and the room shifted. Not metaphorically. My smart lights dimmed amber as "Peace Piece" swelled through floor speakers while album art bloomed across the TV – a synchronized sigh -
Returning from vacation to find my kitchen ceiling collapsed under a torrent of brown water felt like swallowing broken glass. Rain had seeped through the roof for days, turning my grandmother's handwritten recipes into papier-mâché sludge. As I squelched through the wreckage, insurance paperwork flashed in my mind - demanding timestamps, locations, verifiable proof. My trembling hands reached for Truepic Vision before I even called emergency services. -
DeDuplicate - Cloud CleanerPlease note: DeDuplicate now requires an in-app purchase. Scanning drives remains free, but to remove duplicates you need either a small monthly subscription or a one-time purchase for unlimited use.\xe2\x80\x94\xe2\x80\x94\xe2\x80\x94\xe2\x80\x94\xe2\x80\x94\xe2\x80\x94\x -
The wind screamed like a banshee across Rannoch Moor, ripping visibility down to arm's length as horizontal sleet needled my exposed skin. My fingers had gone beyond numb - clumsy sausages fumbling with a waterlogged paper map disintegrating in the gale. Every cairn looked identical in the whiteout, every compass bearing swallowed by the howling void. That metallic taste of panic flooded my mouth when I realized I'd been circling the same damn boulder for twenty minutes. Hypothermia wasn't some -
My palms slicked against my phone screen as I frantically refreshed the transit app, watching precious minutes bleed away. A critical client presentation started in 47 minutes across town, and my train had just vanished from the schedule like a ghost. Sweat trickled down my collar despite the AC blasting - this wasn't just tardiness; it was professional suicide unfolding in real time. That's when the crimson notification pulsed on my lock screen: *"3 drivers en route to your location via Quick R -
Rain lashed against my window last Tuesday as I glared at my untouched running shoes. That familiar dread pooled in my stomach - another dreary jog watching identical mailboxes blur past. My neighborhood routes felt like prison corridors, each step echoing with monotony. Then I remembered the neon-green icon mocking me from my home screen: Tranggle's augmented reality layer. With nothing left to lose, I laced up while thunder rumbled. -
Rain lashed against my Buenos Aires apartment window as I scrolled through fragmented headlines about home, each click deepening the chasm between my Swiss roots and this adopted southern sky. That hollow ache for connection sharpened when I stumbled upon SWIplus Swiss News Hub – not through some algorithm but via a homesick compatriot's tearful recommendation over bitter mate tea. The moment I tapped install, something shifted; suddenly Zurich's tram strikes weren't just transit chaos but the f -
Rain lashed against my windshield like thrown gravel as the Portuguese Atlantic coast disappeared into a wall of fog. My knuckles turned bone-white gripping the steering wheel, not from the storm outside, but from the blinking red icon on my dashboard – 7% battery left. In that moment, every horror story about EVs dying on remote roads flooded my mind. The wipers slapped furiously as I fumbled for my phone, saltwater spray ghosting the screen. When EWE Go's map finally loaded, its blue pinpoints -
Scorching dust coated my throat as the jeep sputtered to a halt near the Navajo Nation border. "No signal out here," muttered Carlos, slamming his satellite phone. My gut clenched - we had three hours to locate a ruptured water main before sunset. Paper maps flapped uselessly in the desert wind, ink bleeding through sweat. That's when I remembered the pre-loaded geospatial tiles silently waiting in my pocket. -
Rain lashed against my hood like gravel as I clung to the slippery basalt, fingertips raw against the rock. Somewhere between the third waterfall rappel and this cursed chimney climb, I'd lost visual references in the Scottish gorge fog. My wrist GPS showed 320m elevation - useless when the cliff face dropped into oblivion below. That's when I remembered the blue triangle icon buried in my phone's utilities folder. Fumbling with cold-stiffened hands, I launched the tool I'd mocked as "overkill" -
That bone-chilling Stockholm night still haunts me - huddled outside Gullmarsplan station at 11:23 PM, watching my last connecting bus vanish into the icy darkness. My phone battery blinked 7% as panic surged through my veins like electric shock. Frigid air stabbed through my inadequate jacket while snowflakes melted against my overheating cheeks. Every exhalation became a visible curse towards this unfamiliar neighborhood's deserted streets.