Panoramio's Blog


Since almost the beginning of the project we received requests for to provide an API. However the last months, specially after reaching the first million of photos, the number of requests rocketed and we realized we should do it. Now Panoramio API is ready.

In any site where location matters photos from Panoramio can help. For example, photos can illustrate the area around a hotel in a reservations website or show how it looks the neigbourghood where a house is located in a real estate site. What is makes photos published by the community of Panoramio so useful is their high quality and representativeness. Panoramio API allows you to select only a selection of the photos (popular tab) or all them.

While we were preparing the API page, some sites already integrated Panoramio photos in their sites. They are great examples of what it can be done with Panoramio API.

- Gpsies.com was the first site that used the API to illustrate its tracks, like this one around the lake Cospudener in Leipzig, Germany (check “Pictures of Panoramio” on the right-bar).

- Joost Schreve from Everytrail.com made a great use of the API for this GPS Travel Communiy. Now while watching the Training route in Westerpark you can see how Amsterdam channels look like.

- Also Jordi L. Ramot from Wikiloc, the winner of the mash-up contest, made the integration in few hours just after knowing about the API. In Wikiloc you can enjoy the beautiful landscape while watching Porcupine Rim track by bike in Moab (Utah).

In the Panoramio API page we included some other examples, coding, explanations and more information.


8 Responses to “Panoramio API released: Display photos from Panoramio on your own website”  

  1. 1 Raúl Ortas

    Thank you!. Keep doing this great job.

  2. 2 Johan Sundström

    Excellent API design! Is there any chance we could request an additional option order=distance, to sort by distance to the center coordinate, smallest first? For all my API use cases, I am much more interested in getting a photo as close to a specific location as possible than getting its recency or popularity.

    (And asking once with a sort criterion is better in all respects than asking numerous times with growing bounding boxes around a location until the first photo is found.)

  3. 3 Klaus Bechtold

    Hi,

    I’m Klaus from GPSies.com and I want to say thank you for that great API! It works really performant (1000 times better than Flickr)!

  4. 4 Philippe Stoop

    Hi Eduardo !
    It’s one more great improvement to Panoramio !
    Is it possible to select only photos associated with a tag ? If not, will it be possible in a next future?

    Congratulations (and thanks for choosing one of my photos as an example :-)

  5. 5 Nestoria

    We at Nestoria, the property search engine, are also proud to announce that we are using Panoramio’s API and brilliant collection of photos to illustrate the new website for Spain, Nestoria España, which just launched this week. Keep the good work.

  6. 6 el coqui

    someone is relocating my photos, need to stop

  7. 7 Vento06

    How many hits or clicks does a picture need to receive for it to be considered “Popular” ???

  8. 8 Art Gould

    Hi

    I’m Art Gould with Everytrail. Since you’ve mentioned by buddy Joost and Everytrail in your blog, we thought you would like to know about
    our just-released integration, as a network layer, with Google Earth.

    When you choose a location with the Everytrail layer active, you will
    see a display of actual trips that real people have shared on the
    Everytrail site. We think that GPS trip sharing in Google Earth
    is a powerful way to share or plan a trip, because the trips
    are integrated with all of the Google Earth facillities.

    EveryTrail is a global web2.0 platform for geotagged user generated
    travel content that is changing the way millions of people share their
    travel experiences and plan their trips. EveryTrail users create
    valuable content, for themselves, their family and friends, and for the
    broader community, by uploading GPS data and photos in order to create
    visual interactive trip reports of their travel experiences.

    If you’re interested, we’ve got more information about trip sharing
    with Google Earth at http://www.everytrail.com/earth and
    on our blog at blog.everytrail.com.

    See you on Every Trail.

    Art

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