Merikotkas stream became a small challenge when the time stamp disappeared from the bottom line. how to time the pictures now? this is especially tricky if you do in another time zone than the nest. the added hour of the summer time makes one more complication.
i made a snapshot of the Juras-Erglis stream and added some information to it. the J-e camera has the time stamp and therefore we know the nest time and can compare it with other timing information that can be dug out. i took the snapshot by clicking shift-printscreen which saves the picture on the clipboard. then i opened Paint and pasted the contents with crtl-v.
the nest time is in the bottom centre. on top left corner is a picture of my computer time which is the EET time at the moment when i took the snapshot. below the calendar on the left is the bunny clock which shows UTC time. i added this extra clock on my desktop.
note that the UTC time remains the same summers and winters, it is not shifted like local times. therefore it was only 7:26 UTC, while in Estonia and Latvia (and Finland) it was 10:26. in London it was 8:26, UTC + 1 hour for summer time.
you can add extra clocks on your desktops in the Control panel in the "Clock, Language and Region section". this might be handy for those of you who live in another time zone than the nest(s).
on the right side of the eagle there's a panel showing the picture propertied of the snapshot: created, accessed and modified at 10:27:39 my pc time. as you can see there's a delay from the nest time. this tells how long it took for the picture to reach me from Durbe to Turku via the 'ether' of the internet.
i hope that some of the data illustrated here will help you to time your pictures which have no time stamp. i name my pictures with the nest time. any of these times will help you to give an approximate time of the events at the nest(s).