Well when I found out that “The phone is everywhere” is the theme of the new Steven Spielberg movie, I decided to write the next chapter in my future civilization series. Bye the way my Mom understood the “phone is Everywhere” story better once I explained how the phones have GPS units in them and they know where you are all the time. The iPhone has GPS location coded with all the digital pictures it takes. So imagine you are on vacation in Paris and you want to keep that shot. just click your SaveMeGPS™ button on your iPhone and it puts a X on that exact spot in the world on your google map. Go everywhere on your vacation or daily life and just mark a X on your GPS world map with your little savemeGPS™ button.
Don’t worry about taking any shots of your self or family shots, just look at the camera and smile, they are everywhere. Click your SaveMePic™ button while pointing it at the camera you want to save the image from to your world map.
Now you get home and want to share all the cool places you have been so you just turn on the “hologram cloud imager”™ and scroll through your iPhone thumb prints or press play all for a time sequence. Your Google worldmap has all your locations saved and now with the playback of the “open cloud 360 virtual world videography”™. You can actually get back into the perspective you were at when you pushed the savemegps™ button on you IPhone. Look around, Google has mapped every perspective from every major location in the world. We are just tagging our location with our “X marks the spot” SaveMeGPS™ buttons on our phones.
Since there are digital cameras everywhere monitoring everything, it is easy to just decide to take a shot. All you do is tag the shot for later retrieval. So when you want a particular picture, just tag the shot with a button on your phone. This is much easier than trying to find your shot from the library of videos from every world camera that is recording all the time. So when you get home just pull up the one you “book marked” with your “savemepic™” button on your phone while you were there. “X marks the Spot” for later retrieval from the cyberlibrary of the sights and sounds of the world.
Another cool benefit of X marks the spot technology is that the interpretation of what happened will be in the eyes of the reader or viewer in real time, rather than the interpretation of the historical events based on the perspective of the one documenting it as it goes along like in the old days.
Don’t throw away the digital camera just yet, but “X marks the Spot is coming…”
Another original article by Clay Franklin all rights reserved. Now back to work…








