Keeping track of photographs by location can be an extremely useful tool, enabling you to easily pull up relevant photos of a place and time. They provide local context about other data collected in the same place, and they can provide office staff with a view of what people in the field saw. You can think of this as your own personal Street View, which is just more focused than Google's version.
For this recipe, you'll need a set of geotagged photos. We've included a set a photos in this book's data for you to learn with. This is a collection of photos from downtown Davis that highlights the density and variety of public art along several blocks.
This recipe also takes advantage of several plugins, as follows:
Follow these steps to view geotagged photo locations in QGIS:
Davis_DBO_Centerline.shp and/or OpenStreetMap/Google Streets via OpenLayers Plugin).
davis-art folder as the input directory.)
If you want to be able to see the actual photos in QGIS and not just the locations, continue with the next section of steps:

In photography, there is a standard metadata format written by most cameras called Exif, which is stored as part of the image file format. Normally, all images store the timestamp, camera model, camera settings, and other general information about an image. When you take a picture with a GPS enabled camera, it should write the latitude and longitude to the photo's metadata. Other programs that are metadata-aware can then read this information at any time. If you happen to touch up these photos, make sure to tell your software to keep or copy the metadata from the original so that you retain the location information.
Don't have a camera or phone with built-in geotagging? This is not a problem. There are many ways to add location information by yourself. One such method is with the Geotag and import photos plugin that lets you link photo data to known locations, and this can be found at http://hub.qgis.org/projects/geotagphotos/wiki.
If you need something more sophisticated, there are many other tools out there. Digikam, an open source photo management program, includes a geotagging tool that will attempt to automatch a GPX file from a GPS to your photos, based on timestamps.
Geotagged photos are also supported by many online photos services, so you can easily browse a map of the photos that you've uploaded. Flickr is probably the most well-known for this, and it also includes a concept of geo-fences, where you can exclude certain locations from being publicly known.
On the flip-side, you now have an idea about how to remove geotags from photos in case you don't want their locations known if you share them online.