| Archive |
| Archive > September 2010, Volume 24, Number 9 > Learning, Sharing, Celebrating |
Learning, Sharing, Celebrating07/09/2010 |
| The Esri User Conference is always an overwhelming occasion, with an agenda almost too thick to choose from. The start is easy, on Monday the majority of delegates attend the plenary session. In the past the leading role on this Monday has been taken by celebrities such as Nobel prizewinner Wangari Mathaai, writer Hernando De Soto, or biologist Jane Goodall. |
| Durk Haarsma, Publishing Director, GIM International |
This year's star was Jack Dangermond himself. Elaborating on features of the latest version of main Esri software package, ArcGIS 10, Dangermond also shed his own light on the future of GIS in a world that changes fast and where web and mobile are becoming part of the daily life of the whole GIS community. The topics touched on by Dangermond encompassed crowdsourcing, proliferation of smartphones and working in the Cloud. ArcGIS 10 is complying with all these new developments, and it looks as if Esri is well on the way to understanding, forecasting and being on top of them all, as fast as they take place in the bigger online world, and adjusting its products accordingly.
Sidetracks
Get the atmosphere and see more pictures in the Esri User Conference 2010 photo album!
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| References |
| http://www.esri.com/events/user-conference/index.html |
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One to be named this year in particular was the Imagery & GIS session, held in the Omni Hotel on the Tuesday and Wednesday of conference week. Lawrie Jordan, director of imagery at Esri, opened this important session with his vision forward, in which he stated that imagery would become an integral part of GIS in the future and that ArcGis 10 held many examples illustrating this. Demonstrating daily practice were case-studies in which the US Navy and the Los Angeles County Department of Regional Planning showed how they implemented and combined imagery & GIS. Panel discussion at the end of both days offered ample time and space to reflect on the case-studies.