Apr 08
The new ESRI Support website

The new ESRI Support website

The ESRI family of websites have been seeing a lot of new updates as of late. The screenshot on the right is of the support site that ESRI offers, which hadn’t changed in quite a while. Notice the changes, including the lack of links to the web help (which has proven so helpful in the past to show people help files), and no direct link to the forums prominent in the page (it is located on the left-hand side navigation bar). Instead, people are directed to the new ESRI Resources site, which appears to be the new organization of resources for ESRI products. It is nice to see ESRI trying to separate the official support requests from the support resources, even though I am not sure which design will be more useful to the majority of users.

The new ArcGIS Resource Center

The new ArcGIS Resource Center

The new resources page, for those that did not notice it, is no longer on the esri.com domain, but rather moves to the arcgis.com domain we discussed in the previous post. In the meantime, arcgis.com is still under construction, which the “Coming soon” phrase over an oblique image of the earth. If anyone has any more insights to this, please do share them on the comments section below.

Tagged with:
Mar 23
ArcGIS.com Online Screenshot

ArcGIS.com Online Screenshot from 03/23/10

ArcGIS.com is now online, with a new look and design, and everyone’s favorite web phrase: “Coming Soon…“. A little bit of searching around the internet reveals some information from Vector1Media regarding a cloud-version of ArcGIS in collaboration with Amazon, providing on-the-go GIS functionality.

This is a dramatic change from the previous functionality of the ArcGIS.com domain, which redirected to the esri.com section about ArcGIS. The Internet Archive has a number of older snapshots available here.

Note that the site is currently only available to ESRI employees, that may actually have to request access too. Curiously, the http://maps.arcgis.com/ domain mentioned in this ESRI Blog entry redirects to the same page, even though the screenshots seem to differ. This of course will be different from ArcGIS Online, which is available now in Beta.

Tagged with:
Mar 16

An interesting question came about a few days ago. While I have been discussing ESRI’s geoprocessor and how one can use it effectively, I failed to define what geoprocessing is,, either within the ESRI realm or the general  GIS realm. In short, geoprocessing is an operation performed on geographic (spatial) data. In other words, it is when one uses data to perform some operations and receiving results. An example would be geocoding. The user provides spatial data (an address), which we geoprocess to identify the output (latitude and longitude). In the ArcGIS world, there are a few methods for geoprocessing:  running commands from the ArcToolbox, the Model Builder, the command line and Python scripting (the one I focus on mostly in this blog).
Continue reading »

Tagged with:
Feb 11

With the new version of ArcGIS coming out soon (9.4, now 10, tomorrow maybe X), it is nice to revisit the things I would love to see change in the geoprocessor. This is by no means a study on what is missing or what ESRI is doing wrong, but rather what I would like to see in the future. If you have any suggestions, please do write a comment and I will gladly add them to the post (and attribute the addition to you).

Continue reading »

Tagged with:
Sep 26

Paolo Corti has a very fascinating article I just stumbled upon on how to use PostGIS geometries with ArcSDE in 9.3. Head over to his website for the fascinating article detailing 4 different methods of using PostGIS with ArcGIS.

Tagged with:
Jul 16

There are some fundamental differences between geoprocessing performed in ArcGIS version 9.2 and 9.3. While I will not cover them all in this post, I will attempt to show the most fundamental differences that people seem to encounter more often.
Continue reading »

Tagged with:
preload preload preload
Easy AdSense by Unreal