Post on 21-Aug-2015
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In this presentation
01. What is Web
Mapping
02. History
04. Mapping
Solutions
03. Why?
05. Future
Web Mapping
What is Web Mapping?
Web mapping is the process of designing, implementing, generating and delivering maps on the World Wide Web and its product.
With the help of the Internet and accompanying tools, creating and publishing online maps has become easier and rich with options. A city guide web site can use maps to show the location of restaurants, museums, and art venues. A business can post a map for reaching its offices. The state government can present a map showing average income by area.
Mapping is a growing field that goes beyond collecting and analyzing GIS data. Web Mapping Illustrated shows how to combine free geographic data, GPS, and data management tools into one resource for your mapping information needs so you don't have to lose your way while searching for it.
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History of Web Mapping?
1994 1998 2004 2005
2006 2010 2013
First interactive
Web map
ESRI’s first internet
map server
Open Street Maps Google Maps
Google Earth
WikiMapia
OSGeo
ArcGIS Online Google Maps
Engine
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Why?
01 Deliver up to date information
02 Cheaper Software
03 Easy Product Updates
04 Data Distribution
05 Personalization
06 Collaboration
07 Interactivity
08 Accessed from any device and place
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Web Mapping Solutions
For your data:
For public data:
ArcGIS Online Google Maps Engine
Google Maps Bing Maps
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ArcGIS Online
ArcGIS Online is a collaborative, cloud-based platform that allows members of an organization to use, create, and share maps, apps, and data, including authoritative basemaps published by Esri. Through ArcGIS Online, you get access to Esri’s secure cloud, where you can manage, create, store, and access data as published web layers, and because ArcGIS Online is an integral part of the ArcGIS system, you can use it to extend the capabilities of ArcGIS for Desktop, ArcGIS for Server, ArcGIS apps, and ArcGIS Web APIs and ArcGIS Runtime SDKs.
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Google Maps Engine
Bring the power of Google Maps to your organization with Google Maps Engine. Layer your data on top of Google’s base map and create your own maps and geospatial applications that are supported by Google’s reliable, world-class infrastructure.
Map Share BuildCreate maps intuitively using Google Maps’ easy-to-use and familiar technology.
Build multi-layered, comprehensive maps, augmenting Google’s rich and accurate map content.
Share custom-made Google Maps anytime and anywhere and publish them at-scale.
With compatibility across Google products, such as Google search, Google Earth and the more than 1M maps being powered by the Google Maps API, your maps can be discovered by the world.
Build geospatially enabled applications on top of Google’s fast and reliable cloud.
Develop on any platform—web, Android, iOS, server, GIS software—to build endless applications, like store locators, crowd-sourced maps, or asset management apps.
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Google Maps Engine (cont.)
Features Maps Engine LiteCreate and share maps with friends and family
Maps Engine ProMap creation tool for the business professional
Maps EngineFully supported, cloud-based mapping platform
Map size Hundreds of points, lines, or polygons (3 layers)
Thousands of points, lines, or polygons (10 layers)
Millions of points, lines, or polygons
Import types Spreadsheet or CSV Spreadsheet or CSV Spreadsheet, CSV, KML, Shape files, and images
Geocoding Up to 100 addresses per layer
Up to 2000 addresses per layer
Up to 100K addresses per dataset
Map styling Basic Basic Advanced
Drawing tools Yes Yes No
Developer APIs No No Yes
Map publishing Share or embed with the Google viewer
Share or embed with the Google viewer
Publish on the web or use in your apps
Imagery and floorplans No No Yes
GIS interoperability and connector tools
No No Safe Software data loader; ESRI and QGIS tools .
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Future of Web Mapping
3D Web Mapping
Indoor Mapping
Vectors Innovation
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Useful links
• Google Maps: http://maps.google.com
• Google Maps Engine: http://mapsengine.google.com
• ArcGIS Online: http://www.arcgis.com
• Open Street Map: http://www.openstreetmap.org/
• OSGeo Project: http://www.osgeo.org/
• GeoServer: http://geoserver.org/display/GEOS/Welcome
• Open Layers: http://openlayers.org/
• Mapbox: https://www.mapbox.com/
• Tilemill: https://www.mapbox.com/tilemill/
• CartoDB: http://cartodb.com/
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Go for
DISCUSSION
THANK YOU