- 4 replies
- 1,915 views
- Add Reply
- 2 replies
- 2,237 views
- Add Reply
- 1 reply
- 1,102 views
- Add Reply
- 1 reply
- 1,194 views
- Add Reply
- 3 replies
- 5,042 views
- Add Reply
Opening old project (*.mxd)
By Santaria,
Hi all,
I still wondering about how to opening older project file (*.mxd) to the new version such as project file from ArcGIS 9.1 to ArcGIS 9.3.
It's very curious, in the other software new version able to open file from old version. but neither with ArcGIS....any suggestion regarding my question?
Thanks a lot
Preserving Georeferencing in Photoshop
By Intellgis,
Hia,
I have a large 8 GB Mr Sid file ( Ortho image).
How can I bring it into photoshop without losing the georeference information so that I can do some cloning etc and then safely merge them back to an original mosaic ?
Regards
Intellgis
A New Geospatial Webinar, From Birds to Bogs: Environmental Monitoring in the UK
By jameslife,
From Birds to Bogs: Environmental Monitoring in the UK
<p>Intergraph invites you to attend the upcoming webinar, From Birds to Bogs: Environmental Monitoring in the UK. This webinar requires registration.
Topic: Change detection & environmental monitoring
Host: Intergraph & Sterling Geo
Date & Time: Tuesday, March 12 @ 10 AM, US EDT (GMT -4)
Register now!
Remotely sensed geospatial data - including Li
Dealing with Changes of Census Tract (2000 vs 2010)
By jathank,
Hi all,
One of the essential function of ArcGIS is the ability to analyze/visualize census data. However, as many of you have know that the ID number AND the shape of the census tracts are not exactly the same when the most recent census came out in 2012. Precisely, the "shape" doesn't change, but some of the 2000 census tracts are divided by two/three/four/five in the 2010 version, and some can be change the other way around. This created a major challenge when I tried to do a time series anal
Python modules for GIS
By rahmansunbeam,
It's been a long time since Guido van Rossum, a Dutch programmer, invented the high-level object-oriented programming language called Python. No sooner the language hit the community, it spread like fire. The true power of python is that it's free, fully open-source, easy to learn and understandable, well documented high-level programming environment. Like any other community, GIS also thrived with it. From OSGeo to the mighty ESRI, everyone is somewhat using Python in their projects. New tools
-
Forum Statistics
8.7k
Total Topics43.4k
Total Posts