1 / 23

Other Parts of ArcGIS

Major Ways to Publish GIS Projects. ArcReader

maia
Download Presentation

Other Parts of ArcGIS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


    1. Other Parts of ArcGIS I Have These GIS Projects that I Want to share with others Now What

    2. Major Ways to Publish GIS Projects ArcReader – ArcPublisher Layered -PDF ArcIMS and Minnesota Map Server ArcGIS Server ArcGIS Explorer ArcGIS ImageServer ArcSDE ArcPad

    3. ArcReader is a free, easy-to-use desktop mapping application that allows users to view, explore, and print maps and globes. ArcReader is a great way to deliver interactive mapping capabilities that access a wide variety of dynamic geographic information. Using ArcReader, anyone can view high-quality maps created using the ArcGIS Publisher extension.

    4. Arc Publisher Work Flow Create a map in ArcMap Turn on the Publisher Extension (if necessary) Add the Publisher Toolbar (if necessary) Select Publish Map (This Creates a .pmf file Select Create Data Package Check the .pmf on a different computer that does not contain the orginal data

    5. Layered PDF New at ArcGIS 9.2 Allows users of the .pdf to turn layers on and off Most users have adobe reader installed Requires adobe reader 6 Adobe reader 7 recommended I have tested under 7,8, and 9

    6. ArcIMS Publish Maps, Data, and Metadata on the Web ArcIMS is a server-based product that provides a scalable framework for distributing GIS services and data over the Web. ArcIMS provides Web publishing of GIS maps, data, and metadata for access by many users both inside the organization and outside on the World Wide Web. ArcIMS enables Web sites to serve GIS data, interactive maps, metadata catalogs, and focused GIS applications. ArcIMS users access these services through their Web browsers using HTML or Java applications that are included with ArcIMS. In addition, ArcIMS services can be accessed using many different clients including ArcGIS Desktop, custom applications created using ArcGIS Engine, ArcReader, ArcPad, ArcGIS Server, MapObjects—Java Edition, and a wide variety of mobile and wireless devices.

    7. ArcIMS Services Image Service Feature Service Metadata Service ArcMap Service

    8. Image Services An image service will send an image to a web browser. It does not send features

    9. Feature Server Streams vector feature to a client like ArcMap, ArcReader, or custom applicaitons

    10. ArcMap Service Uses the .MXD to create a map service The other services use the author and designer application to create sites.

    11. Minnesota Map Server MapServer is an Open Source development environment for building spatially-enabled internet applications. MapServer is not a full-featured GIS system, nor does it aspire to be. Instead, MapServer excels at rendering spatial data (maps, images, and vector data) for the web. http://mapserver.org/

    12. ArcGIS Server Replacement for ArcIMS It can do everything IMS can plus it can publish models Demo http://www.esri.com/flashmedia/arcgisserver/arcgisserver.html

    13. ArcGIS Server VS ArcIMS ArcGIS Server is slower than ArcIMS ArcGIS Server can publish more complex application Development of IMS is slowing in favor of Server

    14. ArcGIS Image Server ArcGIS Image Server is particularly useful when you need to Deploy imagery enterprise-wide to a variety of clients, without preprocessing the data and loading it into a DBMS Perform dynamic imagery processing; providing better image visualization, reduced storage costs, and less data processing and maintenance

    15. ArcSDE At ArcGIS 9.2, ArcSDE is no longer a stand-alone product. It is now known as ArcSDE technology and is included with both the ArcGIS Desktop and ArcGIS Server products. ArcSDE has three versions Personal Workgroup Enterprise

    16. Enterprise Geodatabase Enterprise Geodatabase—This is the traditional ArcSDE geodatabase that was available prior to ArcGIS 9.2 and was designed for large-scale enterprise systems. It is included as part of ArcGIS Server Enterprise. Users provide their own RDBMS license for this level of scalable geodatabase. The RDBMS is typically administered and managed by a database administrator (DBA). The geodatabase can be scaled to any size and number of users, running on computers of any size and configuration.

    17. Workgroup Workgroup Geodatabase—ArcGIS Server Workgroup includes ArcSDE technology support for SQL Server 2005 Express. Workgroup geodatabases have a maximum size limit of 4 GB and support up to 10 simultaneous users and editors. Similar to Personal geodatabases, ArcCatalog is used to set up and manage a Workgroup geodatabase at the ArcEditor and ArcInfo levels of ArcGIS Desktop.

    18. Personal Personal Geodatabase—SQL Server 2005 Express is included with the ArcEditor and ArcInfo levels of ArcGIS Desktop. This enables users to set up and manage a scalable personal geodatabase within ArcCatalog. No additional software or database administration is needed. Personal geodatabases have a maximum size limit of 4 GB and support four simultaneous connections, one being an editor.

    20. Geodatabase Replication Three types of geodatabase replication are provided. For all types, data from an ArcSDE geodatabase must be used as the source for replica creation. All types are also supported in either connected or disconnected environments. The following describes each of these types:

    21. Check out / Check in Replication Check out/check in replication allows you to edit the child replica's data and then synchronize these edits with the parent replica. Once the data has been synchronized you can no longer synchronize additional edits. If additional edits are required, you must create a new check-out replica. When creating check-out replicas, the destination can be either an ArcSDE, file or personal geodatabase. Disconnected editing, which was first available in ArcGIS 8.3, is now part of geodatabase replication and is equivalent to check out/check in replication. The disconnected editing tools that were available in ArcCatalog and ArcMap have been removed and are now part of the distributed geodatabases framework. The disconnected editing geoprocessing tools, however, are still available for backward compatibility.

    22. One Way Replication One way replication allows data changes to be sent multiple times from the parent replica to the child replica. Changes cannot be sent from the child replica to the parent replica. Here the parent replica's data is editable, but the data on the child is considered read-only. If edits are performed on the child replica's data, they will be over-written if they conflict with edits applied during synchronization. Conflicts are not reported when synchronizing with one way replicas. One way replicas continue to exist after synchronization, allowing you to continue sending data changes from the parent replica to the child replica. When creating one way replicas, the destination must be an ArcSDE geodatabase. One way replicas can use either a full or a simple model type: Full - The full model supports complex types (topologies and geometric networks) and requires the child replica's data to be versioned. Simple - With a simple model, the child replica's data is created as simple types and is not registered as versioned. Therefore, geometric networks or topologies from the source geodatabase are not created on the destination geodatabase.

    23. Two Way Replication Two way replication allows data changes to be sent multiple times from the parent replica to the child replica or from the child replica to the parent replica. If the same row is edited in both replica geodatabases it is detected as a conflict when the replicas are synchronized. Reconcile policies are provided to define how conflicts are processed. Two way replicas continue to exist after synchronization allowing you to continue editing and synchronizing the replicas. When creating two way replicas, the destination must be an ArcSDE geodatabase.

    24. ArcPad Run on Windows Mobile Devices Could be run on the data collector for the Geoscience Department’s GPS Can share enterprise databases with several methods Allows for data to be collected directly in a GIS Format

More Related