Title: Desktop, Mobile
1Desktop, Mobile Web Based GIS/ Collaborative GIS
2Desktop GIS
- Create, edit, and analyze geographic data on your
desktop computer. - See your data on a map.
- Analyze your data to reveal patterns,
relationships, and trends that are not readily
apparent in tabular format. - Create publication quality, professional maps.
3ArcGIS Desktop
ArcGIS Desktop is software that allows you to
discover patterns, relationships, and trends in
your data that are not readily apparent in
databases, spreadsheets, or statistical packages.
4Desktop GIS
- Advantages
- You have all the data and processing at your
station
- Disadvantages
- You must invest in the processor and storage
space - Data and maps are not easily shared
5Mobil GIS
- Mobile GIS is the expansion of a geographic
information system (GIS) from the office into the
field. - A mobile GIS enables field based personnel to
capture, store, update, manipulate, analyze, and
display geographic information.
6Mobile GIS integrates one or more of the
following technologies
- Mobile devices
- ArcGIS Mobile
- ArcPad
- StreetMap Mobile Software Developer Kit
- Global Positioning Systems (GPS)
- Wireless communications for Internet GIS access
7Mobile GIS
- Advantage
- Portable
- Allows for some map processing
- Disadvantages
- Minimal storage space
- Need a desktop for most processing
8Web Based GIS
- Access 2D maps, 3D globes, reference layers, and
functional tasks via the Web to support your GIS
work. - Contribute your own data for publishing through
ArcGIS Online and make it broadly available to
other users. - Purchase the data you see in ArcGIS Online and
publish it on your own server.
9Web Based GIS
- Advantages
- Minimal processor and storage space needed
- Many data sets available
- The processor on the web server is likely to be
more powerful than your desktop unit
- Disadvantages
- Must have a fast network connection
- Data resides off site
- Dependent on resources off site, not under your
control
10Collaborative GIS
- Web Based GIS where multiple users can add data
to a single map.
11Collaborative GIS
- Advantages
- Allows for input from
- Multiple Users
- Multiple Data Sets
- Multiple Perspectives
- Disadvantages
- Lack of control over input to the map and
revisions
12Raster vs. Vector
13Raster and Vector Reality
- One of the sharpest distinctions among GIS is the
way that location is represented in a database,
as either a raster or vector position.
These materials were developed by Kenneth E.
Foote and Donald J. Huebner, Department of
Geography, University of Texas at Austin, 1996.
14Raster vs. Vector
- "Raster is vaster, Vector is more correcter"
15The Raster View of the World
- A raster based system displays, locates, and
stores graphical data by using a matrix or grid
of cells. - Each cell has an (x,y) location and a (z) value
which stores attribute data about that location.
16The Vector View of the World
A vector based system displays graphical data as
points, lines or curves, or areas with attributes.
17Advantages and Disadvantages
These materials were developed by Kenneth E.
Foote and Donald J. Huebner, Department of
Geography, University of Texas at Austin, 1996.
18Raster data can be converted to Vector and vice
versa
Note Converting from one system to the other can
introduce error.
These materials were developed by Kenneth E.
Foote and Donald J. Huebner, Department of
Geography, University of Texas at Austin, 1996.