Bring the GPX from your watch and the photos off your camera roll. Drift pins each photo where you took it, figures out what you found, and lays the walk out on a real map as a card you can post.
Your watch files the walk under exercise: distance, duration, a squiggle on a map. The photos land in the camera roll between screenshots, and by Thursday you can't remember which street the mural was on.
The parts worth keeping never make it into the stats: the owl on the low branch, the facade from 1931, the mural that won't survive the summer.
Drift puts the walk back together. It reads the GPX and the photos' own metadata, pins each shot where you stopped, works out what's in it, and writes the whole thing up as one card.
A GPX or TCX export from COROS, Strava, or Apple Health. A screenshot of the walk map works in a pinch.
Up to eight from along the way. GPS and timestamps in the files place each one on the route, and anything that looks like it came from a different walk gets flagged.
Your route on a real map, numbered stops, and a short write-up. One tap shares it as a 1080×1920 story image.
I walk the same few miles of Austin most evenings, and my watch has never once mentioned the owl. The stats were always the least interesting part of the walk, but they were the only part that got saved. Drift keeps the rest.
— CharlieThe prototype is live. It wants a GPX and a few photos.