Proceed to GeoCommunity Home Page


SpatialNewsGIS Data DepotGeoImaging ChannelGIS and MappingSoftwareGIS JobsGeoBids-RFPsGeoCommunity MarketplaceGIS Event Listings
HomeLoginAccountsAboutContactAdvertiseSearchFAQsForumsCartFree Newsletter

Sponsored by:


TOPICS
Today's News

Submit News

Feature Articles

Product Reviews

Education

News Affiliates

Discussions

Newsletters

Email Lists

Polls

Editor's Corner


SpatialNews Daily Newswire!
Subscribe now!

Latest Industry Headlines
Bluesky's Home Heat Loss Data Goes Online in Calderdale
GTG Selected for Multiple Software Contracts
LBS Wireless Launches a Field Data Collection Application for the iPhone and iPod Touch
Mayrise Mapping System for Street Lighting Contracts in London
ESRI’s Electric and Gas User Group Members Share GIS Best Practices

Latest GeoBids-RFPs
Tree Planting Services - KY
Watershed Modeling and Assessment-MA
LIDAR Surveying Services
AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY-LA
Data Processing*Written in Polish

Recent Job Opportunities
Senior GIS Applications Programmer
Consultant, ESG
LiDAR and Orthomosaic Technical Specialist
GIS Developer
GIS Analyst/Data Loader
GIS Analyst/Data Loader
Principal Geospatial Systems Administrator

Recent Discussions
Need Ancient British Counties
need benin - africa street level data
Modeling erosion from a site
Month numbers used for solar radiation
Efficient Distance Calculation
On Tuesday, February 1, 2000 the GeonetCom seminar series continued with a presentation about the Internet GIS at Pima County, Arizona. The seminar was presented by Mr. Jack Lloyd, GIS Manager at Pima County and Mr. John Dickinson, Senior GIS Analyst at Pima County.

The County’s Internet GIS was launched in July of 1997 and was developed entirely in-house. There is very little Java script and no API customization. The website is a “general purpose” one, having no specific application or customer in mind and is publicly available to everyone via the Internet.

Pima County serves up their maps using Autodesk’s MapGuide software and Cold Fusion from Allaire to access ORACLE data from several in house servers. Users can view over 100 different map layers which are integrated with scanned documents, and data from the county’s assessors office and the city’s main database server. The MapGuide server uses dual 450 Mhz Pentium III's, 512 MB RAM, 10 GB internal SCSI drive, 120 GB external SCSI disk for orthophotos, Windows NT 4 server, and Mapguide 4.

Click to Enlarge

Much of the website’s functionality is “out of the box” and has been developed with several key elements in mind; ease of use, stability, delivers existing vector map data, simple for end users to navigate. Lloyd and Dickinson demonstrated the ease of use of the County’s website in an excellent presentation. They walked us through live examples of how the public can use the site to quickly and easily perform spatial selections to produce mailing lists, access scanned survey documents, view aerial photography, and access geodetic control files. The only requirement of the end user being a web browser and an image viewing tool (plug-in) to access TIF raster files. Here are some screen captures we made during the demo.

Click to Enlarge
Zoom-Go-To Example

Click to Enlarge
Sanitary Sewer Layer

Click to Enlarge
Geodedic control Data

Click to Enlarge
Aerial Photography Backdrop

Pima County has had nothing but positive feedback from the public regarding the website, and traffic has increased steadily every month since the site went live. Last month alone there were over 164,000 requests made to the MapGuide server, with requests mostly coming from County employees, other government users, engineering companies, real estate professionals, and the general public.

You can contact Jack Lloyd at jlloyd@dot.co.pima.az.us and John Dickinson at jdickins@dot.co.pima.az.us

The Pima County Map Server can be accessed at www.dot.co.pima.az.us

Article by Glenn Letham, editor
SpatialNews and The GeoCommunity
editor@geocomm.com

Return to GeonetCom News Page

Sponsored by:

For information
regarding
advertising rates
Click Here!

Copyright© 1995-2009 MindSites Group, LLC / Privacy Policy

GeoCommunity™, Wireless Developer Network™, GIS Data Depot®, and Spatial News™
including all logos and other service marks
are registered trademarks and trade communities of
MindSites Group, LLC