diff --git a/handbook/computing/myphone.html b/handbook/computing/myphone.html index 8dd176560..88146436a 100644 --- a/handbook/computing/myphone.html +++ b/handbook/computing/myphone.html @@ -46,9 +46,10 @@
Even if you have no intention of using your location or recording a track, the camera in your phone will record locations of your photos which are extremely useful to future expeditions - for reasons which only become apparent when you yourself try to work out what someione did 10 years previously. @@ -57,6 +58,9 @@
So when taking a photo of an entrance, always take one photo; delete it, and take another. This will give your phone a chance to get synchronised properly.
ALSO: always take 3 photos of any entrance, the obvious one about 10m away, a scene-setting one from 20 or 30m away, but also a really close one of 3 to 5m away, so that we can see if rocks have moved around the entrance and also for a much better identification in future. If there is a tag, always take a close-up photograph of it so that the letters are readable. + + +