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New Learn Paths A Learn Path is sequenced set of resources for learning about a particular topic. Here's a roundup of new paths in the Learn ArcGIS Gallery that have appeared in the last month. Exploring Location Analytics in Business Education Explore why and how to use Location Analytics in Business Education with this set of readings, case studies, and hands-on activities. GIS for computer science CTE programs (Python) See the role of GIS in computer science CTE. Use the spatial lens of GIS to help students in the career cluster for information technology understand data processing, scripting, and automation. Explore GIS through Python and Jupyter Notebooks. New Learn Lessons A Learn Lesson is a step-by-step tutorial that uses a real-world scenario to introduce key ArcGIS tools and workflows. Here's a roundup of new lessons in the Learn ArcGIS Gallery that have appeared in the last month. Visualize global COVID-19 trends in ArcGIS Insights (ArcGIS Insights) The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has impacted the world at an unprecedented scale. Combatting the pandemic will require worldwide data collection and sharing. The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) provides the latest available public data on COVID-19, which can be used to gain critical insights about the disease's spatial and temporal spread. In this lesson, you'll create an overview of global COVID-19 cases in ArcGIS Insights. You'll map data from the ECDC and create charts to show how cases are changing over time. Your result will be a shareable workbook that displays and describes the pandemic from multiple angles and makes key information understandable and accessible. Visualize social distancing across California (ArcGIS Pro) Nothing has changed our collective spatial behavior quite like the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. Esri partner SafeGraph allowed ArcGIS users to track changes in social distancing behavior with timely statistics. SafeGraph creates this data from mobile apps that collect location data, and they’ve developed algorithms to quantify behavior patterns into simple, understandable metrics. In this exercise, you’ll explore a prepared set of block group-level SafeGraph social distancing metrics from May 1, 2020, to June 14, 2020, with charts and animations. You’ll also use space-time pattern mining tools to assess patterns and visualize the data as a multidimensional voxel layer. Site a new hospital (ArcGIS Online) The Loudoun County Board of Supervisors seeks a location for a second hospital in the county. The site must meet the following criteria: Be within two miles of urban areas. Be more than a 20-minute car ride from the current main hospital. Be within one mile of main roads. In this lesson, you'll use proximity tools to create data layers to address these criteria. Then, you'll use data management tools to combine the layers to find possible locations.
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10-26-2020
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Hello Zachary, I've got a guess. And, I think I have this right: Folders are only listed in the pulldown menu in an ArcGIS pane if they already exist in the account of the signed in user. That is, each user has to create the folder in ArcGIS Online (in My Content) before it can appear in the pulldown. If your student did not create the folder in the student's account before doing the analysis, it will not appear in the pulldown. Adena
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10-26-2020
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Hello Melanie, The community will be happy to try to help! Can you provide further details about: what you are trying to do? what software product you are using? what error message(s) you see? (screenshots can be very helpful!) Adena
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10-12-2020
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Hello Melanie, I'd take a look at this support article for starters. Adena
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10-07-2020
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Hello Denise, ArcGIS Online Assistant has limitations; one is that it cannot move StoryMaps. Please see these documents for ways to move content between organizations. Learn ArcGIS: How to transfer content to your next account How to copy content from one ArcGIS Online account to an using Python Adena
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10-06-2020
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New Pages We've got a new home page aimed at getting visitors to the appropriate content quickly via experiences and capabilities. Check it out! We've got a new page for K-12 educators just starting with GIS. Check it out! New Learn Paths A Learn Path is sequenced set of resources for learning about a particular topic. Here's a roundup of new paths in the Learn ArcGIS Gallery that have appeared in the last month. Make a map in a minute Learn how to make a map in a minute (or less) using ArcGIS Online and ArcGIS Living Atlas of the World. GIS for population and development studies: Data analysis and visualization Learn advanced spatial analysis and cartographic techniques. New Learn Lessons A Learn Lesson is a step-by-step tutorial that uses a real-world scenario to introduce key ArcGIS tools and workflows. Here's a roundup of new lessons in the Learn ArcGIS Gallery that have appeared in the last month. Validate edits in the utility network with attribute rules (ArcGIS Pro) In this project, your role is as a GIS Analyst who has started working with an organisations electric utility network in ArcGIS Pro. Over the past few months, you've noticed certain irregularities with edits made to the peak load attributes of services in the network while performing regular QA/QC processes. After discussing the problem with your colleagues, you've decided to implement new attribute rules to prevent certain types of edits and to create a log that can be shared for monitoring and analysis of the edits made to the features. Map the highest mountains A web map can include descriptive information about features in a pop-up. The information that appears when a feature is clicked can include text, images, and links to web pages. As a map maker, you decide what information to include and how to present it. In this lesson, you'll create a .csv file with data about five of the highest mountains in the world. You'll use the file to create a layer on a map. Then, you'll customize the layer's pop-ups so that when you click a mountain feature, you will see key information and a photo of the mountain. This lesson, adapted from one developed for middle and high school students, is making its debut in the Learn Gallery. You can find it and others like it by searching the tag "teachgis" in the Gallery search bar. Make a map of China In this lesson, you'll make a map of China. Along the way, you'll copy and save a map; navigate around a map; and arrange, filter, and style layers. This lesson, adapted from one developed for middle and high school students, is making its debut in the Learn Gallery. You can find it and others like it by searching the tag "teachgis" in the Gallery search bar. Updated Lessons The Learn ArcGIS Team updates lessons for the latest version of software products. Here's a round up of lessons that were updated to new software versions. Actionable intelligence (ArcGIS Pro 2.6) Analyze the global oil market (ArcGIS Online June 2020, ArcGIS Pro 2.6) Build a model to connect mountain lion habitat (ArcGIS Pro 2.6) Design and publish basemaps (ArcGIS Pro 2.6) Estimate solar power potential(ArcGIS Pro 2.6) Explore NOAA's deep-sea coral database (ArcGIS Pro 2.6) Fly through South America in a 3D animation (ArcGIS Pro 2.6) Interpolate 3D oxygen measurements in Monterey Bay (ArcGIS Pro 2.6, new section) Map breast cancer differences by ethnicity in ArcGIS Pro (ArcGIS Pro 2.6) Mapping the public garden in ArcGIS Pro (ArcGIS Online June 2020) Mapping the public garden in ArcMap (ArcGIS Online June 2020) Monitor whales with a multilingual survey (ArcGIS Online June 2020, ArcGIS Survey 123 3.1) The power of maps (ArcGIS Online June 2020) Understand the refugee crisis with link analysis (ArcGIS Insights 2020.2) Use species distribution patterns to assess protected areas (ArcGIS Online June 2020)
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09-25-2020
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Hello Salman, My guess is you are not signed in with the ArcGIS account provided in the MOOC (_gpsa or another acronym related to the MOOC name). It has more privileges than the one you may have used to register. Please review the Common Questions in the MOOC itself for information on using your course ArcGIS account. Adena
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09-08-2020
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Hello Pamfil, Please contact service@esri.com. They can get you to the right people to sort this out! Adena
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09-03-2020
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Hello Bishal, I'm sorry for the confusion! We launched two programs this spring: one for students and one for professionals whose jobs were impacted by COVID-19. The one you joined, for students, ends on August 31 as noted in the e-mail. We cannot extend your existing student account. There is however a new student program starting Sept 1 that you may be able to join. The second program for professionals, which you did not join, is referenced in this blog post. This information does not apply to the program you joined. I hope that makes things clearer. - Adena and the Learn ArcGIS Team
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08-24-2020
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New Learn Paths A Learn Path is sequenced set of resources for learning about a particular topic. Here's a roundup of new paths in the Learn ArcGIS Gallery that have appeared in the last month. Editing rasters in ArcGIS Pro with Pixel Editor tools Get a jump start on editing raster datasets with the Pixel Editor tools in ArcGIS Pro. Try the new Map Viewer Explore how responsive smart mapping in the new Map Viewer can show you a different view of your data and help you make better decisions more quickly. New Learn Lessons A Learn Lesson is a step-by-step tutorial that uses a real-world scenario to introduce key ArcGIS tools and workflows. Here's a roundup of new lessons in the Learn ArcGIS Gallery that have appeared in the last month. Use ArcGIS AppStudio to build a 311 mobile app (AppStudio) ArcGIS AppStudio provides ready-to-use configurable templates to help you create and deploy mobile apps that run on multiple platforms and don't require you to write any code. In this lesson, you'll configure and test a mobile app for citizens to submit nonemergency community 311 requests, such as graffiti removal, streetlight repair, and tree maintenance, to the City of Cilantro. Create a report in ArcGIS Insights (ArcGIS Insights) The number of fatal cycling accidents in Ottawa, Canada, increased between 2015 and 2018. Cycling advocates have called for the city to adopt a Vision Zero policy to eliminate traffic fatalities and increase public safety. You have completed your analysis of cycling safety, and now you must share your results with stakeholders. You want to have a professional-looking report that clearly and effectively communicates your findings. In this lesson, you'll apply cartographic principles and custom design choices to an existing Insights workbook before you share the report. Updated Lessons The Learn ArcGIS Team updates lessons for the latest version of software products. Here's a round up of lessons that were updated to new software versions. Map Breast Cancer Differences by Ethnicity (ArcGIS Insights 2020.2) In a 2017 report, the American Cancer Society estimated that, in the United States, American women incurred 252,710 new cases of breast cancer and that 40,610 women had died from the disease. ACS statistics also reveal significant disparities between white and black women. Although the survival rate between those two ethnic groups is narrowing, significant disparities remain. In this lesson, you'll take a deep dive into those reasons by mapping mortality rates and risk factors. Get started with ArcGIS Insights (ArcGIS Insights 2020.2) The number of fatal cycling accidents in Ottawa, Canada, increased between 2015 and 2018. Cycling advocates have called for the city to adopt a Vision Zero policy to eliminate traffic fatalities and increase public safety. In this lesson, you'll create a workbook in ArcGIS Insights to analyze which city wards have the most accidents and which route types are safest (or most dangerous) for cyclists. By combining charts and maps, you'll determine what steps the city can take to make cycling safer. Update Real-Time Data with Python (ArcGIS Pro 2.6) National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Coral Reef Watch frequently updates data on coral bleaching. If you map this data, it'll likely become outdated within a few weeks. How do you automate updates so that your GIS layers use the latest data as soon as it becomes available? One way is to use a feed routine. A feed routine is a workflow where data is queried from a live feed repository and the information is passed to a map. In this lesson, you'll use Python to create two feed routines, one that automatically updates feature classes in ArcGIS Pro and one that automatically updates feature services on ArcGIS Online or ArcGIS Enterprise. This lesson will introduce you to both basic and advanced Python topics. Analyze fire preparedness with the ArcGIS GeoEnrichment Service (ArcGIS Pro 2.6) Marin County, California, is known for its heavily forested areas and has many homes in areas with a high risk of fire. County supervisors plan to partner with the American Red Cross to educate the community about fire prevention, preparation, and response as part of its Home Fire Campaign. In this lesson, you'll perform regional analysis of Marin County's forested areas. In particular, you'll determine the percentage of homes that have a smoke detector. This information will help officials target their campaign geographically. Get started with ArcGIS Online (ArcGIS Online June 2020) Hurricanes can result in tremendous damage and loss of life. With online maps, you can help plan evacuation strategies and share your findings with the people who make decisions. You'll create a map of Houston, Texas, based on publicly shared data. By analyzing vehicle ownership across the city, you'll pinpoint areas that may have difficulty evacuating in time. Then, you'll present your results as a professional-looking web app for others to explore. Manage data in ArcGIS Online (ArcGIS Online June 2020) Manage data in ArcGIS Enterprise (ArcGIS Enterprise) Human-wildlife interactions are becoming more prevalent, and many communities have inevitably found that some of their neighbors are coyotes. To inform the community where they may have a higher risk of encountering coyotes, you'll publish a data layer for people to report and view coyote activity. There are three different audiences for this data, each with unique requirements as follows: Public—Adding observations to a map Public—Viewing only reported coyote activity that has been reviewed for quality City staff—Adding observations to a map and viewing and modifying all recently reported coyote activity You'll create hosted feature layer views from your published layer to give each intended audience a focused experience when working with the coyote activity layer. Hosted feature layer views provide a unique set of capabilities that allow you to meet the needs of each audience. Using views helps to simplify your work, reduce unintended edits, and avoid duplicating the source data. Finally, you’ll add the views to a map so you can compare the different user experiences. You'll add and delete features to confirm your views are ready for use in your organization and the community. Policy mapping - Improve newborn health (ArcGIS Online June 2020) The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently set a goal: By 2020, no more than 7.8 percent of newborns in the United States should have a birth weight under 5.5 pounds. You want to suggest policy actions to your state government to improve newborn health and help reach this goal. To do so, you'll create a policy map that identifies two groups of counties: those closest to meeting the goal and the major outliers impacting the state's average. You'll ensure your map visually communicates clear policy goals, and then share it as a web app. This lesson is targeted toward government employees or any civic-minded individual who wants to make a difference in their community.
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08-23-2020
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Isaac, You are looking in all the "right" places. Since ArcMap is heading toward the end of its life, there are fewer courses and resources created or updated that focus on that desktop software. This MOOC from Pace University starts in August and uses ArcMap. Adena
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07-23-2020
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Teach with GIS Beta Website The Learn ArcGIS Team unveiled a beta website, Teach with GIS, at the User Conference. The site is aimed at K-12 educators who want to include GIS in their teaching. The site includes videos of educators sharing why they include GIS technology in social studies and STEM lessons. There are also a dozen ready-to-use hands-on apps and stories that students can explore in the classroom or at-home. New Learn Paths A Learn Path is sequenced set of resources for learning about a particular topic. Here's a roundup of new paths in the Learn ArcGIS Gallery that have appeared in the last month. Teach with ArcGIS Notebooks Use ArcGIS Notebooks as a teaching tool, from delivering class assignments to presenting analysis as a slideshow. This path is aimed at educators who want to include ArcGIS Notebooks in their teaching. New Learn Lessons A Learn Lesson is a step-by-step tutorial that uses a real-world scenario to introduce key ArcGIS tools and workflows. Here's a roundup of new lessons in the Learn ArcGIS Gallery that have appeared in the last month. Find, inspect, and replace guardrail end treatments in ArcGIS Online Find, inspect, and replace guardrail end treatments in ArcGIS Enterprise The Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) recently published information about a statewide operation to replace a certain type of guardrail end treatment that has caused multiple deaths. In this lesson, you'll manage multiple stages of this operation, including data collection, guardrail inspections, and recording the replacements. First, you'll create a feature layer in ArcGIS Online to contain the data. Then, you'll use ArcGIS QuickCapture, Collector for ArcGIS, and Survey123 for ArcGIS to complete the operation. Last, you'll display the results in ArcGIS Dashboards. Identify retail gaps with void analysis As demand for healthy foods and beverages grows, power juices and smoothies increase in popularity. A successful juice bar chain in Frisco, Texas, wants to expand to neighboring cities in Collin County. But does the area already have similar businesses that may reduce demand, or is there a gap that the juice bar can fill? To answer these questions, you'll perform void analysis in ArcGIS Business Analyst Web App. Void analysis identifies gaps in specific businesses and services in one area compared to a similar area. You'll use it to compare Frisco to a neighboring city and find out if that city has a gap in juice bar businesses that the chain can fill by opening a new location. While this workflow uses void analysis for retail, void analysis can also be used for services, real estate, and business networks. Use species distribution patterns to assess protected areas (ArcGIS Online) Species diversity is the foundation of a healthy planet. The leading cause of species extinction is habitat loss. Protecting species requires protecting enough suitable habitat for species to live, thrive, and fulfill their ecological function. The Half-Earth Project is working to conserve half the Earth's land and sea in order to protect enough habitat for 85% or more of Earth's species. The Half-Earth Project is mapping the location of species, protected areas, and human activities, and using this information to identify the best places to protect the most species. GIS is at the core of determining which half of the Earth to protect. This Learn Lesson introduces some of the mapping methods the Half-Earth Project team deploys, and how these methods lead to identifying conservation priorities. The two fundamental considerations for examining biodiversity in any area are: Species Richness - the total numbers of species in that area Species Rarity - based on the number of species found only in that area In this learn lesson, you will focus on protected areas and species information on the rarity of birds to understand and map how countries are protecting bird species with the highest rarity. This lesson focuses on the continent of Africa, though the analysis can be replicated for other locations. Use multidimensional data to predict coral-bleaching events (ArcGIS Pro and ArcGIS Image Analyst extension for ArcGIS Pro) Coral reefs serve as a significant repository of marine biodiversity and are home to about 25 percent of marine species. Thus, the health and long-term success of these reefs are critical in maintaining our marine ecosystems. Unfortunately, reefs worldwide face many risks, primarily due to climate change. These include ocean temperatures that are too warm for coral survival, which may result in coral bleaching. In this lesson, you will use several years of daily sea surface temperature data to create a model that employs time-series forecasting capabilities to explore the impact of sea surface temperature on coral bleaching. Using model results, you will predict and identify locations showing anomalously high water temperatures. This will allow you to predict areas that are likely to be vulnerable to coral bleaching. Explore Paris with ArcGIS Online In this lesson, you'll create a map of Paris, France, to learn the basics of working with maps in ArcGIS Online. Learn how to navigate, create, and save a map. Search for and mark locations, change the basemap, and add new layers.
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07-22-2020
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Hello Hamed, This section of a post on ArcGIS public and ArcGIS organizational accounts may be helpful. Adena
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05-08-2020
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Table of Contents 1) ArcGIS Public Account vs. ArcGIS Organizational Account ArcGIS Public Account – opens the door to the Esri community for training, discussions, and more! ArcGIS Organizational Account – unlocks the power of ArcGIS software platform You can create this account yourself, for free The ArcGIS organization's administrator must create this for you and provide information on how to access it Available to just about anyone over 18 The ArcGIS organization's administrator determines who needs an organizational account Lasts a lifetime since it can't expire The ArcGIS organization's administrator can create, change the privileges for, and delete an organizational account Most people need just one; having more than one is just confusing You may have more than one at a time for different tasks (work project vs. free course); be sure to select the correct one to access the needed privileges and licenses Holds your training history (courses completed, certificates, etc.) forever Holds current ArcGIS Online privileges and named user ArcGIS licenses (such as for ArcGIS Pro); the ArcGIS organization's administrator can add or remove these as needed and delete the account entirely Provides access to Esri.com websites (like Esri.com/training) The ArcGIS organization's administrator decides if the account provides access to Esri.com websites (like esri.com/training); many temporary accounts will NOT have Esri Access enabled Provides limited access to ArcGIS Online (www.arcgis.com) Provides enhanced access to ArcGIS Online (www.arcgis.com); the administrator determines what privileges and licenses are available Was at one time called an Esri Global account or an Esri account Was at one time called an ArcGIS Online organizational account Can be "turned into" an ArcGIS organizational account, with an invitation to join an organization The ArcGIS organization's administrator decides if the account includes access to Esri websites and licenses for Esri software like ArcGIS Pro 2) All About ArcGIS Public Accounts A) You can create an ArcGIS public account at accounts.esri.com. (Before you do, check to see if you already have one, since one is enough for most people.) B) An ArcGIS public account allows access to websites with "esri.com" in the URL, including Training (www.esri.com/training), Esri Community (www.esri.com/community), My Esri (my.esri.com). You can see the websites you can visit in the drop-down menu, when you are signed in. C) An ArcGIS public account stores your training history; you can find it at My Learning Activity. D) An ArcGIS public account provides limited access to ArcGIS Online. There is no access to analysis, no credits to spend, and no access to named user licenses for ArcGIS software like ArcGIS Pro or Collector. E) Two ArcGIS Public accounts can be merged. Please contact accounts@esri.com to merge two or more accounts. F) An ArcGIS public account can and should stay with you from school, to job, to another job... Using one ArcGIS Public account from your first connection with Esri through your latest course or webinar, ensures all of your Esri related information is accessible in one place, forever. 3) All About ArcGIS Organizational Accounts A) ArcGIS Online or ArcGIS Enterprise administrators create ArcGIS organizational accounts. The administrator, your manager or your instructor will provide information on how to access the account. B) An ArcGIS organizational account does not provide access to websites with esri.com in the URL (Training at www.esri.com/training, Esri Community at www.esri com/community, etc.) UNLESS it is "Esri enabled." This is a switch the ArcGIS administrator can turn on or off for each organization member. If this switch is on, then the ArcGIS Organizational account can access the same sites an ArcGIS public account does (esri.com websites); it also has other organizational privileges. If this switch is off, then the account does not provide access to esri.com websites. Further, if the switch is “off” for your ArcGIS Organizational account, and you try to visit an esri.com website by signing in with that account's user name and password, you will see the message below. It reminds you the account you signed in with is not Esri enabled. That is, this ArcGIS Organizational account has the switch "turned off." What should you do if you see this message and can't get to the webpage you seek? Click the “Sign out of this account” blue button Navigate to the esri.com website URL you want to reach (Perhaps it was www.esri.com/training/my-schedule? Or www.esri.com/community?) Sign in (via a dialog box like the one below) with either an ArcGIS Public account or an ArcGIS Online organizational account that is Esri-enabled. You may think the best solution is to contact your administrator to request that the switched be "turned on." There are good reasons for administrators to leave the switch off, so read up on them before you make that request. C) ArcGIS organizational accounts provide access to ArcGIS Online, and if granted privileges by the administrator, access to analysis tools, premium content, credits and named user licenses for ArcGIS software like ArcGIS Pro, Collector, etc. 4) Keeping Track of your Accounts To find the user names for all of your accounts associated with an e-mail address, visit www.arcgis.com and click on “Forgot username?” If you have more than one e-mail address, you may need to repeat this a few times to find them all. You will receive an e-mail reply with a listing of all the ArcGIS accounts, public and organizational, associated with each e-mail address. The response below is the for an individual who has: - An ArcGIS public account with user name “username" - An ArcGIS organizational account with the user name “username_mycompany.” Note that the ArcGIS organizational account has Esri access "disabled," meaning "the switch is off" and that this account cannot be used to access Esri.com websites. Note too, that the message refers to an Esri Public Account; that's the "old name" for a ArcGIS public account. 5) Best practice: One ArcGIS Public Account and One or More ArcGIS Organizational Accounts The main reason to have one ArcGIS Public account and one or more ArcGIS Organizational accounts is that one ArcGIS Public account will stay with you during your career and ArcGIS Organizational accounts will "come and go." Remember: An administrator may delete an ArcGIS Organizational account once a project, course, or job ends. Because ArcGIS Organizational accounts are "temporary" your ArcGIS administrator may be hesitant to turn on (“enable”) Esri access. When deleting an ArcGIS Organizational account that is Esri enabled, an ArcGIS administrator has the choice of deleting the training history associated with the account or to letting the account remain with the training history as an ArcGIS Public account. (I refer to this as a ZOMBIE ArcGIS public account!) We strongly urge students and professionals to maintain a single ArcGIS public account through their careers. Should your organization provide Esri-enabled ArcGIS organizational accounts, consider contacting accounts@esri.com to move your training history to an ArcGIS public account before such an account is deleted.
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04-29-2020
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Please be sure that ArcGIS Pro is configured correctly for your Personal Use named user license. You need to confirm: -the correct license type (named user) is selected -the correct licensing portal (I'm not sure those are for a Personal Use license - you will need to find this information) is set Once you set these correctly, sign out of ArcGIS Pro, then sign in again to have the new setting take effect. Adena
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04-28-2020
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