Conversely, as a hobbyist photographer, I want to do the exact opposite for most photos I take.
I would like my camera info, especially the body, lens, focal length, and settings in the image. I recently discovered that software like Darktable can even take a gpx file and photo timestamps to add coordinates to photos taken on a camera without a GNSS receiver.
A writable file closing itself when it goes out of scope is usually not great, since errors can occur when closing the file, especially when using networked file systems.
Or it’s simply an indicator of a schema that has not been excessively normalised (why create an addresses_cities table just to ensure no duplicate cities are ever written to the addresses table?)
Some couriers (DPD? UPS?) in the UK take this a step further and will even come with the label ready to stick on the box.
Great if you don't have access to a printer.
I recall (perhaps incorrectly) that Royal Mail once offered a service where you could buy an "online stamp", then you would write a long string of letters and numbers above the address on the envelope to send it. It was distinct from freepost.
I would like my camera info, especially the body, lens, focal length, and settings in the image. I recently discovered that software like Darktable can even take a gpx file and photo timestamps to add coordinates to photos taken on a camera without a GNSS receiver.