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Hello @MAHMOUDBENDALOUM - Thank you for your question, but the document that you refer to is now 8 years and our technology and workflows have evolved since then. Tagging @HongXu for you.
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11-03-2023
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Sorry @AjayKumarKodali but you may find your answer in a different community. This thread is about GIS Day. Please try instead, https://community.esri.com/t5/arcgis-pro-partner-solutions-questions/integrating-arcgis-pro-with-sap-hana/m-p/1221898
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12-07-2022
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Greetings everyone - here is a recap of my GIS Day adventures with elementary school students in my community via a Flickr album, a Twitter Wakelet, and a final Instagram post. What an epic day!
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12-03-2022
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Many know of the American Geophysical Union (AGU) as one of the world’s most well-respected Earth science scholarly organizations. Its annual fall meeting usually dwarfs the Esri UC by well over 10,000 attendees. Last year, AGU followed the lead of many other organizations in holding its meeting completely online, while extending the length of the conference from 7 days to 17. Last year's event attracted 25,482 attendees from more than 100 countries, maintaining its status as the largest Earth and space science meeting in the world. This year's conference (#AGU21) will feature a hybrid experience over the course of just one week, with both in-person and virtual presentations in oral and poster sessions, in-person and virtual eLightning sessions, and an in-person exhibitor showcase. Esri is once again a PREMIUM-level exhibitor with an on-site booth presence under the theme of Next Generation Science Entails WHERE. The 3-main topic pillars/stations at the booth will be Sustainable Future, Climate Change Initiatives, and Open Science. There will be a bevy of rich content, messaging and demos under these topics, including on multidimensional scientific data and analysis, imagery, big data geoanalytics, raster analytics, The Living Atlas of the World, ArcGIS Pro, R and Python integration, ArcGIS Hubs, GeoPlanner, Insights, ArcGIS StoryMaps, Learn ArcGIS, MOOCs, World [Terrestrial] Ecosystems (aka Ecological Land Units), Ecological Marine Units, Ecological Coastal Units, the entire web GIS pattern, our commitment to open/interoperable, and more. Throughout the entire conference, Esri will have booth staff available each day should any AGU attendee have questions, wish to speak with Esri experts, or request a science demo. Free books, the famous "Globey" Esri stressballs, and other giveaways will be part of the action too! In addition, a variety of science books from Esri Press will be available to AGU attendees at significant discount. Be sure to take advantage of this opportunity by visiting https://go.esri.com/AGUbooks. Many thanks to Esri Earth Sciences Solution Director Lorraine Tighe for coordinating the participation of 5 booth staff in this important scientific conference. Beyond the booth, we are also pleased to share the lineup of presentations that will be made by Esri staff at the 2021 AGU Fall Meeting in a virtual mode. AGU is striving to make as much content live for virtual attendees, as well as on-demand, with pre-recorded oral presentations and virtual posters available for attendees to view even outside the scheduled live Q&A sessions during the meeting. You’ll see in the list below of scientific papers, posters, and entire sessions that Esri is leading or contributing on a wide variety of interesting and important projects. Many of these are in collaboration with our federal partners at NASA, NOAA, US Forest Service, Department of Energy, EPA, and the USGS, as well as several universities and national laboratories. This showcases how Esri not only enables great understanding of the world with our products and services, but also performs good science, and contributes well as a member of the scientific community, sharing and inspiring others as to The Science of Where. AGU PRESENTATIONS and SESSIONS with Esri Co-Authors (where B = Biogeosciences, ED = Education, EP = Earth and Planetary Surface Processes, IN = Earth and Space Science Informatics, GC = Global Environmental Change, GH = Global Health, SY = Science and Society; 5-character codes are entire sessions) B11A-03Ecological Settings of Earth's Coastlines ED34A-12UnstableGround: An Interactive Website to Visualize and Communicate How the Arctic is Changing. EP12C - Proven AI/ML applications in the Earth Sciences I Oral EP15H - Proven AI/ML Applications in the Earth Sciences II Poster GC43C-05A Spatial Approach for Predicting Future Climate-Induced Shifts in Agriculture Using Machine Learning GH21A-06A Generalized Linear Elastic Net Regression to Model Impacts of Environmental and Demographic Factors on Childhood Academic Performance IN15A-02Beyond Raw Data: CF-netCDF as the Foundation for Advanced Spatial Analysis IN51A-02Collaborative Sea-Level Science on NASA’s Science Managed Cloud Environment: Toward an Earth Information System SY14A-02Building a Digital Twin of the Dangermond Preserve – the Last Coastal Wilderness in Southern California Dawn Wright was also a committee member behind the AGU Town Hall: TH45LJustice, Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion in the Earth and Space Sciences: Conversation on Issues and Opportunities With the AGU Diversity and Inclusion Advisory Committee SELECTED AGU PRESENTATIONS or SESSIONS by OUR USERS (where ED = Education, G = Geodesy, H = Hydrology, IN = Earth and Space Science Informatics, NH = Natural Hazards, NS = Near Surface Geophysics; 5-character codes are entire sessions) ED12A-02Adopt-a-Pixel 3km: Facilitating Collaborative Science through NASA Tools, Imagery, and Resources ED34A-08Using ESRI Story Maps to Support Student Research in the Research Experience for Undergraduates on Sustainable Land and Water Resources ED45D-0752An Educational Program for Engaging Rural Students for Agricultural in situ Data Collection EP25A-06Utilizing ArcGIS Pro for the Analysis of Source-to-Sink Sediment Flux during the Last Glacial Maximum G35C-0304A Cloud-based Operational Surface Water Extent Mapping Service from Sentinel-1 SAR H14F-01Operational Near-real Time Drought Monitoring Using Global Satellite Precipitation Products (CMORPH) and In-situ Datasets (NClimGrid) H25D-1088Probabilistic determination of Hurricane effects over the Georgia Coast in the Changing Climate with HAZUS-MH model customization & remedial decision support system development H41I-01Using Random Forest to Predict 1,2,3-Trichloropropane Contamination from Legacy Non-Point Source Pollution of Groundwater in California’s San Joaquin Valley H54I-06Trend Analysis of Streamflow Data for the Upper Brazos River IN14B - Advances in Earth and Space Science Informatics II eLightning IN33B-04GES DISC’s ArcGIS Image Service with Integrated Multi-satellitE Retrievals for Global Precipitation Measurement (IMERG) data IN44A - Advances in Earth and Space Science Informatics I Oral IN45C - Advances in Earth and Space Science Informatics III Poster IN45G-0514Building ArcGIS Services in AWS for NASA GES DISC Data NH25A-0535Analysis of Flood Risk Changes in Semarang, Indonesia NS15A-0364Investigating Rock Glaciers in the Eastern Sierra Nevada with Ground-Penetrating Radar: Internal Structure, Composition, and Hydrologic Role in a Changing Climate
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11-12-2021
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[October 13] The Science Symposium recording is now uploaded to YouTube at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lNxPHJLFUI8.
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10-13-2021
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[October 13] The Science Symposium recording is also now available on YouTube here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lNxPHJLFUI8.
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10-13-2021
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Many know of the American Geophysical Union (AGU) as among the world’s most well-respected Earth science scholarly organizations, and its annual fall meeting has dwarfed the Esri UC by well over 10,000 attendees. In 2019 the AGU Fall meeting was held, face-to-face, in San Francisco's newly-renovated Moscone Center. It attracted 28,000 attendees from 113 countries, maintaining its status as the largest Earth and space science meeting in the world. With this year's pandemic, AGU is following the lead of many other organizations in holding its meeting completely in virtual space, while extending the length of the conference from 7 days to 17. This will allow it to accommodate over 1000 hours of virtual content and to minimize conflicts over all the world's time zones. Within this virtual mode, Esri is a PREMIUM-level exhibitor with a virtual booth presence under the theme of Next Generation Science Entails WHERE: The Analysis Ecosystem That Facilitates Scientific Discovery. It will feature a bevy of rich content, messaging and demos on multidimensional scientific data and analysis, imagery, big data geoanalytics, The Living Atlas, ArcGIS Pro, R and Python integration, ArcGIS Hubs, GeoPlanner, Insights, ArcGIS StoryMaps, Learn ArcGIS, raster analytics, Ecological Land Units, Ecological Marine Units, the entire web GIS pattern, our commitment to open/interoperable, and more. Throughout the entire conference, Esri will have virtual booth staff available each day should any AGU attendee have questions, wish to speak with Esri experts, or request a science demo. AGU attendees may make such a request via this Survey123 link. In addition, a variety of science books from Esri Press will be available to AGU attendees at significant discount. Be sure to take advantage of this opportunity by visiting https://go.esri.com/AGUbooks. Many thanks to Esri Earth Sciences Solution Director Lorraine Tighe for coordinating the participation of over 20 Esri virtual booth staff in this important scientific conference. Beyond the virtual booth, we are also pleased to share the lineup of presentations that will be made by Esri staff at the 2020 AGU Fall Meeting. AGU is making all such content live, but also available on-demand, with pre-recorded oral presentations and virtual posters available for attendees to view even outside the scheduled live Q&A sessions during the meeting. You’ll see in the list below of scientific papers, posters, and entire sessions that Esri is leading or contributing on a wide variety of interesting and important projects. Many of these are in collaboration with our federal partners at NASA, NOAA, US Forest Service, Department of Energy, EPA, and the USGS, as well as several universities and national laboratories. This showcases how Esri not only enables great understanding of the world with our products and services, but also performs good science, and contributes well as a member of the scientific community, sharing and inspiring others as to The Science of Where. AGU PRESENTATIONS and SESSIONS with Esri Co-Authors (where A = Atmospheric Sciences, B = Biogeosciences, C = Cryosphere, ED = Education, EP = Earth and Planetary Surface Processes, IN = Earth and Space Science Informatics, GC = Global Environmental Change, NH = Natural Hazards, SY = Science and Society; 5-character codes are entire sessions) A128-06 New York City greenhouse gas emissions estimated with inverse modelling of aircraft measurements B080-0009 Detecting ecosystem changes by merging multiple satellite remote sensing platforms across the Arctic-boreal zone C056-00014-Nonylphenol in Sierra Nevada Glaciers, California, USA ED001-03 Charting a Global Course for GIS Education for 2030 EP046 Data-Driven Research in the Earth and Planetary Sciences I Posters EP046-0003 Modeling Mobility Patterns Uncertainty of Twitter Feeds During an Earthquake Using Spatio-Temporal Point Process Models IN003 Harnessing Emerging High-Performance Computing, Cloud, and Data Analytics Capabilities: Preparing the Climate, Solid Earth, Space, and Geospatial Sciences for Exascale eLightning GC068-0001A Random Forest Based Spatiotemporal Regression Model for the Impact of Greenspace on Childhood Academic Performance. GC130-06 Informing urban climate planning with high resolution data: the Hestia fossil fuel CO2 emissions for Baltimore, Maryland NH007-0010 Democratizing Safety During an Earthquake: Multi-Disciplinary Spatial Optimization for Defining Evacuation Centers with Fair Access in L.A. County NH007-0021 Spatio-Temporal Colocation Causality Analysis of Injected Water and Induced Earthquakes in Oklahoma SY025-03 Utilizing Remote Sensing to Measure Urban Decongestion Strategies in a Post COVID 19 Environment SY035-0014 Leveraging earth observation data at the science-society interface: tools to help countries monitor and mitigate marine pollution Dawn Wright is also a speaker in the AGU Town Hall: TH097 Diversity and Inclusion in the Earth and Space Sciences: Candid Discussion with the AGU Diversity and Inclusion Advisory Committee Dawn Wright will deliver special invited remarks during the Ignite@AGU special event, 12/2/2020, 4:30-6:00p ET And watch for these special presentations (under PROGRAM in the AGU Fall Meeting top-level navigation): Exhibitor Presentation Theater: Earth Science Research Methods Protecting our Planet - 12/7/2020, 1:30-2:15p ET We rely on Earth to sustain us. Understanding today's complex challenges facing Earth and its response to biodiversity loss, ecosystem degradation, polluted air and water, plastic pollution, natural hazards, management of natural resources, and climate change are the at the heart of Earth sciences research. We support Earth and space scientists with cutting-edge location-based technologies in data analysis, dissemination, and storytelling to expand our knowledge and scientific understanding of Earth’s systems for the benefit of humankind. Join us for demonstrations to extract deeper insight from massive volumes of multidimensional earth observations, using a comprehensive set of analytical methods and spatial algorithms, including machine learning and deep learning techniques to solve problems that face our nation and the world. Presenters: Lorraine Tighe; Orhun Aydin; Joseph Kerski, and Ankita Bakshi. Career Center Theater: GIS - A Universally Fundamental Job Skill - 12/9/2020, 1:30-2:15p ET A strong foundation of GIS skills brings with it a combination of artistry and scientific practice for a truly holistic approach to problem solving and decision making. GIS skills are multidisciplinary and can analyze problems at global and local scales using authoritative data. Learn how to merge and analyze multidimensional and multidisciplinary data, conduct change- detection incorporate AI/machine learning into complex research, and share your findings all in one system. The use of unmanned aerial vehicles of GIS data collection have opened an exciting new realm of geospatial applications and job opportunities (e.g., for a certified drone pilots). The demand for GIS skills is growing and will continue to grow. In this session you will hear from GIS experts about enhancing your research and accessing relevant training resources to develop your applied skills. Presenters: Dan Pisut; Joseph Kerski, and Kathy Cappelli. Living Atlas Services Used in Hurricane Preparedness and Response on AGU TV "The GEOGloWS ECMWF Streamflow Service is a worldwide application of the global runoff forecasts from the European Centre for Medium-range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) that transforms runoff into river discharge forecasts for every river of the world. Led by Brigham Young University (BYU) and Esri, it grew out of an effort to build a U.S. National Water Model National in 2015 by NOAA. This GEOGloWS ECMWF Streamflow Service is now fully running on ECMWF cyberinfrastructure. The hydrologic data service consists of the same 40-year historical simulations from ECMWF's ERA5-Land reanalysis and 15-day ensemble forecasts produced daily for the Copernicus Emergency Management Service Global Flood Awareness System (GloFAS)." -- from a GEO press release. Additionally, these services have been used in recent weeks in operational response mode by emergency managers at Cepredenac in Guatemala. SELECTED AGU PRESENTATIONS or SESSIONS by OUR USERS (where B = Biogeosciences, IN = Earth and Space Science Informatics, NH = Natural Hazards, SY = Science and Society, V = Volcanology, Geochemistry and Petrology) B114-0003 Dynamic Soil Properties Web Application ED029-0010Blue Carbon: Bringing Field Research and ArcGIS Mapping to the High School Classroom IN003-11 Outcomes from the NASA ArcGIS Distributed Active Archive (DAAC) Collaboration IN003-12 GES DISC Geographic Information System (GIS) Service and Path Forward IN005-03 L34RS: Providing Earth Analysis Ready Data by NASA GES DISC IN005-13 Serving netCDF-based NASA EOS Products with ArcGIS Image Service IN034-02 VIIRS Direct Broadcast Advances for Improved Wildland Fire Monitoring in Alaska NH012-06 Automated storm damage severity mapping from satellite imagery using image segmentation and machine learning SY008-10Educating with ArcGIS StoryMaps to Promote Ocean Literacy and to Highlight Connections Between Generations, Cultures, and Disciplines SY029 Narrowing the Gap in Environmental Problem Solving: Connecting with Communities Using Emerging Geospatial and Communications Technologies I eLightning SY033-0002 Utilizing ESRI Dashboards to Visualize Geospatial Data in the Saint Louis River Area of Concern SY041-08 Studying the 2019 Australian Bushfires Disaster Using NASA Data: A Data-Driven Storytelling Approach SY047-16 3D Viewers, a Dashboard, and Data Services in Support of Arctic Science: ARMAP and AOV V009-08 Reconstructing Tumalo Volcanic Center (Central Oregon Cascades, USA) Eruption Volumes Using ArcGIS View and search the entire 2020 AGU Fall Meeting Program at this link. View and search the 2020 AGU Fall Meeting Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) schedule at this link. Visit Esri's complete online Science Portfolio at esriurl.com/scicomm.
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11-15-2020
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Esri Events is working on it! It is in the queue of videos to soon finally get to YouTube! I will announce here and elsewhere as soon as it is ready!
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09-20-2020
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Thank you Vincent and the Zotero "plugin" would be a great suggestion for Allen Carroll and his StoryMaps team.
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08-17-2020
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Esri, as the world's sixth largest privately-owned technology company, a world leader in geographic information system software, spatial data science research and development, and a strong record of supporting thousands of environmental conservation initiatives since our founding in 1969, holds a vision to conduct business in harmony with the environment. This embodies Esri’s core values in the way we function, and spurs us on toward our mission of continually embedding sustainability in our internal operations (e.g., www.esri.com/en-us/about/sustainability-statement). As part of our values we acknowledge that everyone and everything in this world is connected. One does not have to lose profits by conserving – everyone needs clean air, clean water, everyone has a sense of place. It does not have to be good vs evil. We care about the same things no matter what business sector we represent or where we fall on the POLITICAL spectrum: we want a safe place to live, clean water, clean air for our families, safe food, gainful employment; good health for our family, friends, loved ones, our community, city, country, world. Science-based land and ocean conservation serve to ensure this. Esri’s ongoing sustainability initiative, includes a new strategic plan, a host of performance reporting and employee community networking and sustainability improvement projects, all in keeping with the #TogetherWithNature principles. This plan includes: Continuing to Reduce our greenhouse gas (GHG) Footprint by identifying our current scope of emissions and working to reduce our net GHG emissions. Quantifying Sustainability in Esri Operations by following policies and practices to reduce our environmental impact, exceed environmental standards where practicable (such as Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) Standards and the GHG Corporate Standard), and measuring our success. We currently deploying our own host of company-wide sustainability performance dashboards, built with our own GIS technology, that tracks pounds of CO2 emissions avoided, pounds of e-waste and hazardous waste recycled, gallons of water saved, kilowatt hours saved, pounds of particulate emissions saved, and annual car CO2 emissions avoided. Increasing Environmental Stewardship: as sustainability lies deep in our company’s values, we aim to foster sustainable practices within our organization and among our employees, distributors, and partners, including the conservation and protection of existing ecosystems on our campuses, within our vast communities, and at the global level through deep participation in initiatives such as the EO Wilson Biodiversity Foundation’s Half-Earth, Microsoft’s AI for Earth and Planetary Computer, National Geographic’s Earth Pulse, Nature Serve’s Map of Biodiversity Importance, and the United Nations Sustainable Development Solutions Network, and more. Enabling Sustainability Solutions: The largest impact we can make in creating a sustainable world is through our users. We work to enable our user community of 350,000 organizations worldwide to build sustainability solutions with our location intelligence technology. To make careful and consistent decisions on issues such as fair and sustainable economic models that create new employment opportunities; where to engage underserved customers; where a company’s carbon footprint is rising or falling; where employees’ income levels fail to match the local cost of living or reveal discrepancies like a gender pay gap, companies need a way to monitor, manage, and report on their activities. One way to do this is to focus on the element that grounds nearly every social responsibility issue: its geographic dimension—the whereof what happens. For a holistic view of where an organization’s work supports its broader social duties—and where improvements are needed—companies are moving toward the idea of smart mapping to create a corporate responsibility map. In smart maps, organizations have a powerful tool to plan, track, and manage efforts toward responsible practices in every geography they touch. Many have already harnessed location intelligence generated by smart maps to grow their businesses profitably. Now, they’re finding this geographic guidance indispensable in the era of stakeholder value. Esri is proud to be among the 120 Signatories that have committed to the four #TogetherWithNature principles for investing in #NatureBasedSolutions. For more information, see TogetherWithNature.com.
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08-05-2020
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cc Dan Patterson Kevin Butler Keith VanGraafeiland
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08-03-2020
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Many thanks again to those who attended the Science Symposium as part of the 2020 virtual Esri User Conference. Your participation made for the greatest event ever, with 1183 attending from at least 20 countries.... ... and the amazing keynote address by Katharine Hayhoe generated 140 audience questions and comments within Slido, as well as some great audience responses in terms of polls and word clouds within Poll Everywhere! We, of course, were not able to get to all of the questions, and Katharine and I recorded a second podcast between us (Climate Change is Here and Now) as a way to answer a few more of the remaining questions and take on related issues. This podcast was released in mid-November and was also announced via @khayhoe, @deepseadawn and @GISandScience on Twitter, as well as LinkedIn. See also our first podcast, Climate Change: Science, Solutions, Hope, released in June. We are pleased to share with you these items by way of Science Symposium followup: a recording of the entire session is available within the UC 2020 platform for those of you who were officially registered for the UC. If you log in again, you can re-watch the session as many times as you would like at uc2020.esri.com/live-stream/15346311/Science-Symposium. October 1st update! The full recording is now available on YouTube ! the introductory slide deck of Esri Chief Scientist Dawn Wright is still available at this link; the slide deck of keynote speaker Prof. Katharine Hayhoe is now available at this link; a Wakelet social media compilation featuring your own notes, impressions, and screen shots is now available at wakelet.com/wake/gg4HggQjJtP26BECndRws or as a pdf. there are some additional photos by yours truly on Flickr beginning here. Prof. Hayhoe's TED Talk: The Most Important Thing You Can do to Fight Climate Change: Talk About It Even more resources following on from the October podcast: Global Weirding episodes on YouTube Fourth National Climate Assessment Esri's Racial Equity and Social Justice Resources (extremely relevant to climate change) Project Drawdown Climate Courage by Andreas Karelas All We Can Save: Truth, Courage, and Solutions for the Climate Crisis edited by Ayana Elizabeth Johnson and Katharine K. Wilkinson (with a chapter by Katharine Hayhoe) Next year's keynote will be delivered by NatureServe Chief Scientist and Vice President for Conservation Healy Hamilton! Thanks again and we hope to see you next year!
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07-21-2020
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The 2020 UC Science Symposium is still on and will occur on Thursday of the virtual UC. Please stay tuned for more details or watch the event web site which we hope will be updated in the coming weeks. The keynote address will be given by Prof. Katherine Hayhoe of Texas Tech University .
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05-18-2020
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