Jacksonville cooling towers, Part 2

These guys are two of my favorite subjects in Jacksonville.
Part 1 can be found here.


Camera: Nikon D90
Exposure: 6 s
Aperture: f/11.0
Focal Length: 50 mm
ISO Speed: 100


Camera: Nikon D90
Exposure: 30 s
Aperture: f/8.0
Focal Length: 34 mm
ISO Speed: 200

Wrestling with Google Places

I’ve come across many folks who have encountered an error when trying to add a business to Google Places. Even though the business you’re trying to add might look like it has the correct address, such as “Jacksonville Florida 32257,” the following error is seen:

No such State/Province in this country. Please enter a valid State name (or Province name)

Obviously, Florida is indeed a state in the US, but Google cannot recognize it for some reason.

It seemed the only way to fix this error was to manually edit the location and select the correct state from the drop-down menu. This is acceptable, I suppose, if you’re only adding one or a few locations. However, I was encountering this error when trying to add more than 400 locations using the bulk upload and verification feature. It’s essentially a spreadsheet with multiple fields that Google reads automatically. But, it was not reading the “State” field properly, returning the error above for every single location.

So I found a solution: Simply use the state’s postal abbreviation instead if its full name. Google recognized the state names easy peasy and I’ve had zero problems. For your reference, here’s a link to the official USPS state abbreviations: LINK

Yes, it’s a shame Google has not corrected this error yet. There are help topics after help topics of folks encountering this same problem, but no response from Google that I can find. I realize Places is a consumer-level application so Google doesn’t offer support, but they need to fix this obvious error, especially when it’s affecting a large number of businesses.

I hope others with this issue come across this post and end the frustration!

Perspective (and some more symmetry)

Sometimes, it’s not necessarily the subject that makes the photograph; it’s the perspective.

As usual, click the images for a larger version on a black background.

Camera: Nikon D90
Lens: Tamron 17-50mm f/2.8
Exposure: 1/500
Aperture: f/8.0
Focal Length: 22 mm
ISO Speed: 200
 

Camera: Nikon D90
Lens: Tamron 17-50mm f/2.8 w/ circular polarizer
Exposure: 1/60
Aperture: f/8.0
Focal Length: 17 mm
ISO Speed: 200