Posted by pastureofplenty 4 days ago
It allows the camera to write almost its output without considering how you're holding the camera, and then write just three bits to indicate how it should be displayed.
(It should be two bits, since the third logical bit is for mirroring, except the specific flag values they chose for the non-mirrored rotations were 0x0, 0x2, 0x5, and 0x7.)
I believe rotation is lossy if you don't do it in metadata and the file is using subsampling.
Edit: some sites will rotate the file on upload, especially for scaled, non-original versions, to avoid this issue. I've done this at work in the past.
> If the boundaries of land owned either by public or by private entities have been disturbed by earth movements such as, but not limited to, slides, subsidence, lateral or vertical displacements or similar disasters caused by man, or by earthquake or other acts of God, so that such lands are in a location different from that at which they were located prior to the disaster, an action in rem may be brought to equitably reestablish boundaries and to quiet title to land within the boundaries so reestablished.
https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displayText.x....
from duckduckgo search (pulled from wikpedia? idk)
In rem jurisdiction
In rem jurisdiction is a legal term describing the power a court may exercise over property or a "status" against a person over whom the court does not have in personam jurisdiction. Jurisdiction in rem assumes the property or status is the primary object of the action, rather than personal liabilities not necessarily associated with the property.
I hope that clears up any confusion!
If you and your neighbor have already decided ahead of time what is fair, then the courtroom stuff is probably just rubber-stamping and recording it so that when one of you sells the next owner has a clean title. If the two of you don't agree then at least you've got someone neutral to help out. The whole thing seems to be a bit absurd but what is better?
Why absurd? To me it feels like the rational way to sort it out.
Wonder what Hawaii does or any other place where it isn’t unusual for “new land” to be created. Like if your lot along the coast gets extended by volcanic action does your properly line get auto-extended as well or does the extension become part of the public shoreline?
That works very well for Australia that moves northwards at 10 cm per year, IIRC.
Also, IIRC San Andreas is a transform fault? So conservative? But not all are. Or are ridges and subduction limited to oceanic crust?
This frequently comes up when parcels are defined as being bounded by a river or something. 999x/1000 it's a non-issue.
The point of conflict here being that not every vertex of a parcel is necessarily defined by a survey marker.
Figure 7. Hollister 6th street
2021: https://youtu.be/RUNCEZs9nkU?t=168
2022: https://google.com/maps/@36.8506199,-121.4066009,3a,90y,250....
Figure 22. CA-25
2023 (patched up, drainage channel added): https://google.com/maps/@36.4065854,-120.9937028,3a,90y,216....
Streetview also available for 2022, 2012, 2007 that shows some cracks/offset.