Archive for the ‘ArcGIS’ Category

ESRI Federal User Conference February 22-24

Wednesday, January 11th, 2012

Rick Marshall will be speaking at the ESRI Federal User Conference (Also called the Fed UC) held at the Walter Washington Convention Center in Washington, DC, February 22-24. Rick will be speaking on the subject of “AMC GeoBase ArcGIS Server Visualization Support for Air Mobility Rodeo 2012.” You can read the abstract and details for Rick’s presentation on the ESRI website here: Link.

If you are at the conference please fell welcome to drop in and say hi. We hope to see you there.

ESRI’s Community Maps Program

Friday, October 28th, 2011

Esri has started a Community Maps Program where individuals or organizations can contribute  geographic content to become part of a community map that Esri publishes and hosts online. Your data is integrated with data from other providers and then published through ArcGIS Online as a map service.

This program is available to any Esri user organization and other geographic data providers interested in making their data content broadly available.

Benefits

  • Users inside and outside of your organization, including the local business community and the general public will be able to use the online maps with ArcGIS for DesktopArcGIS Explorer, ArcGIS for Server Web mapping applications, or a standard Internet Web browser.
  • Eliminates the costs associated with making the data widely available, such as setting up and maintaining the infrastructure.
  • Map data is hosted and maintained by Esri at one or more data centers in the U.S. to ensure high availability and performance.
  • Your organization retains all ownership of its data.
  • Access to your map data through an online map.
  • Esri can provide the data in ArcGIS for Server map cache format that your organization can publish for internal use with ArcGIS for Server.

Watch a video to learn more about the benefits of participating in the Community Maps Program.

 

New Route 66 Community Map Added to ArcGIS Online

Sunday, October 23rd, 2011

We finished digitizing the primary Route 66 highway from Chicago, Illinois to Santa Monica, California on ArcGIS Online. You can see the map on ArcGIS Online at: http://bit.ly/ouLaKV or view it from the applet below.

The entire route is digitized along with selected roadside attractions along the route in Illinois. We would like to solicit your favorite content (places, pictures, postcards, etc) from places along the route. If you have content you would like to see added to the map please let us know at rick.marshall@verticalgeo.com


View Larger Map

The Future of Cloud-based GIS Analysis with ArcGIS Online

Thursday, October 6th, 2011

Last August the ESRI Insider posted Bern Szukalski’s ideas on the future of cloud-based GIS analysis.  We heard some of this during this summer’s ESRI User Conference, but it is good to see it put in writing.  Here is the post:

The cloud is growing in importance for GIS professionals, with cost efficiency, scalability, and flexibility as major drivers. We can see the beginnings of cloud options for many organizations with the ability to run ArcGIS Server in the cloud and also via Esri’s managed services in the cloud.

On a similar, but yet somewhat different and exciting frontier, ArcGIS Online is a key part of the Esri vision for ArcGIS in the cloud. However, up until recently the focus for ArcGIS Online has been on the data part of GIS – making and sharing maps, apps, and other resources, and organizing online communities.
At the 2011 Esri International User Conference we introduced new ArcGIS Online capabilities – hosted services from Esri that enable anyone, not just GIS professionals, to be able to publish Web services using CSV files, shapefiles, and other sources. These capabilities also enable GIS users to publish maps via hosted services directly in the cloud from their ArcGIS Desktop, leveraging data in their enterprise and making ArcGIS Desktop the premier dashboard for Web publishing.
Currently in closed beta, these emerging ArcGIS Online capabilities will enable anyone to publish geographic information in an efficient, scalable, and cost-effective manner. And perhaps most importantly, they will make publishing GIS services that can be accessed by anyone easier than ever before.
During the Esri User Conference plenary Jack Dangermond spoke about the evolution of ArcGIS Online, and Jeremy Bartley and I demonstrated new capabilities that included publishing web services directly via ArcGIS Online and ArcGIS Desktop:
As significant as these capabilities are, they are focused on publishing maps and layers. But what about the ability to use ready-to-run geoprocessing tools and perform analysis via the cloud?
To answer that question, here’s an Esri Insider peek at some very exciting work in progress from the ArcGIS Online and ArcGIS Explorer Online development teams. Below is a screen capture showing the current development version of ArcGIS Explorer Online using cloud-based buffer and clip services to find the locations of wells within 200 meters of any stream:
The capabilities will include a long list of what could be described as “classic” ArcGIS capabilities, before only available to GIS professionals but soon offered via cloud-based services to non-GIS professionals alike. These promise to change how ArcGIS can be used, leveraging GIS throughout existing organizations and empowering many new users with GIS capabilities.
These capabilities will also be available in a variety of applications including the built-in ArcGIS.com map viewer, configurable Flex and Silverlight applications, and Web APIs. Stay tuned for more announcements over the next few months.
By Bern Szukalski

St Louis Has Rams Fever Again

Thursday, September 8th, 2011

I mapped out georeferenced tweets tonight for the St Louis Ramsm using the hashtag #rams.  Looks like the city is excited about opening day on Sunday.  Note:  there are no filters applied to any of the tweets.  What you read is what you get, uncensored.  The map is located here:

http://www.arcgis.com/home/webmap/templates/OnePane/azuretwitter/index.html?webmap=7020d54c71f446569ca5d79c6545c5ae&search=#rams

 

 

The ArcGIS 10.1 Beta is Here!

Thursday, September 8th, 2011

ESRI has announced that the ArcGIS 10.1 Beta Program is here.  You can get all the current information on the Beta Program here:  Link.

 

It’s beta 1 time for ArcGIS 10.1 if you have pre-registered for the beta program you should have gotten an email with instructions on how to download the beta software.  If you have not yet joined the program go to the new ArcGIS Beta Community site and sign up today.