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That's a good question, I'll see if I can find out.
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05-23-2024
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The Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project (ACLED) is a disaggregated data collection, analysis, and crisis mapping project. ACLED is the highest quality and most widely used global, real-time data and analysis source on political violence and demonstrations around the world. Practitioners, researchers, journalists, risk analysts, corporate security managers, and governments depend on ACLED for the latest reliable information on current disorder patterns. An aggregated ACLED data file is now available through ArcGIS Living Atlas of the World. There are three items to explore: a feature layer, a group layer of key indicators, and a web map with time configuration. For more information, see Armed conflict data now available in ArcGIS Living Atlas by @BonnieStayer. Visit the ArcGIS Living Atlas home page to learn about what's new and how to use content. See the ArcGIS Living Atlas blog for more blog articles that help you get the most out of Living Atlas.
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05-22-2024
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Eighteen hosted feature layer items, designed to support local climate resilience planning, are now available in Living Atlas. These Climate Resilience Index layers combine climate risk exposure variables with data like land cover type and demographics to create a composite index. You can use the indices to help plan and deploy risk mitigations at the census tract level and can quickly incorporate the ready-to-use feature layer items into your planning and mitigation workflows. Customize the style and cartography to suit your needs. For more information, see Tools for building community climate resilience by Mark Gilbert. Visit the ArcGIS Living Atlas home page to learn about what's new and how to use content. See the ArcGIS Living Atlas blog for more blog articles that help you get the most out of Living Atlas.
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05-21-2024
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No worries, happy to help. Glad things are working for you now.
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05-06-2024
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I did successfully use the GeoJSON you included above to create a hosted feature layer that I added to a map. I did that by downloading and unzipping your file and dragging and dropping it into New item. Here's the map: https://www.arcgis.com/apps/mapviewer/index.html?webmap=745c0d6afe5d4dae94cc949ba65510c7 And it works in Map Viewer Classic as well.
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05-06-2024
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ArcGIS Living Atlas now contains an updated collection of layer views of the most requested commodities from the latest 2022 USDA Census of Agriculture release. Conducted every five years, the census provides a richly detailed, U.S. county-level look at agricultural production, labor, equipment, and spending. While the full census compiles thousands of agricultural attributes, the 2022 Living Atlas collection contains 23 layer views of the most requested commodities, updating the previous 2017 Census of Agriculture release with 8 new collections. For more information, see Dig into the 2022 U.S. Census of Agriculture by @CraigMcCabe . Visit the ArcGIS Living Atlas home page to learn about what's new and how to use content. See the ArcGIS Living Atlas blog for more blog articles that help you get the most out of Living Atlas.
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05-06-2024
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I took a quick look, was able to repro, but did an analysis in Classic to essentially copy those two polygons (Find Existing Locations using where area greater than 0). The resultant analysis layer works just fine in Map Viewer. So, that leads me to think it might be something amiss with the geometry. You didn't mention how you created the layer, but I'd start looking there. Pro has a repair geometry geoprocessing tool that should also fix the issue.
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05-06-2024
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You will incur credit consumption for storage. This help topic provides all the details for the credit costs/consumption for various types of content: https://doc.arcgis.com/en/arcgis-online/administer/credits.htm Using the computing power available to you from ArcGIS Desktop to create tile packages minimizes credit consumption for publishing hosted tile layers. Although credits are consumed for tile package storage, once a tile package is published, you can delete the tile package item to further minimize credit consumption. One thing to consider is publishing your content as hosted feature layers. HFLs offer a lot of additional capabilities (e.g., they are "smart," can have have configured pop-ups, can be styled in various ways, etc.) plus their storage cost is far less than creating and storing the (potentially massive) amount of tiles for high-resolution, multi-scale maps. With improvements over the years to hosted feature layers, I've been going back to my old tile layers and republishing them as hosted feature layers, gaining lots of economies WRT storage along the way plus additional capabilities including no-brainer performance and "intelligence" and other capabilities inherent to HFLs. Another option is to publish as vector tiles, which do have a lower footprint storage-wise when compared to map tiles. The current disadvantage of vector tiles is that they are inherently "dumb" like map tiles in that you cannot configure pop-ups, etc. But they can be styled in a variety of ways and support rotation and other "modern" capabilities. Case in point - all the former Living Atlas map tile basemaps were abandoned in favor of vector tiles, which makes update easier and delivers additional capabilities. Where it me, I would explore hosted feature layers as the best way forward. If you are an enterprise user, then using your own infrastructure/servers is the way to go unless scalability/demand dictates otherwise.
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04-28-2024
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That sounds like a good course of action. If possible, share the polygon layer you are using with me and I can take a (very) quick look at it and give it a quick test.
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04-28-2024
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There are two kinds of categories - organization wide categories and group categories. Group categories are uniquely defined within the group and can only be discovered by those with access to the content in the group. Organization categories can be discovered by anyone with access to the content across the organization and are "outside the box" of group categories.. You can add content to a group by filtering based on organization categories. When you set up categories in the group, they are unique to the group and only apply to content in the group. This is a dated blog article, but is still valid. https://www.esri.com/arcgis-blog/products/arcgis-online/administration/content-categories-four-ways-an-introduction-to-organizing-and-finding-content-by-theme/ I think it would be beneficial and useful to search group content by organizaton categories, or to be able to set up a group using existing organization categories rather than create unique ones within the group. I'll take this up with the dev team, but encourage you to add this as an idea if you agree and get others to vote it up.
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04-28-2024
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I did quickly try this using a point and polygon layer, extracting to a CSV, and then publishing the CSV as a hosted feature layer to check the extraction. Everything worked as expected. Were it me, I would make sure that you've got your polygon layer set as your Extent layer. If you've inadvertently used your point layer as the extent layer, it's the full extent of the point (or line) layer that is used to set the extraction extent. If you've done that, then I would scrutinize the polygon layer to make sure there's nothing unusual or amiss. Another alternative workflow to the Extract Data tool would be to use Find by Attributes and Location, then use Export Data in the Overview tab of the resulting hosted feature layer to export to the desired format.
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04-26-2024
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Finding the data you need for your specific project isn’t always an easy task. Luckily, ArcGIS Living Atlas of the World is a resource included within ArcGIS to help address this need for easily accessible, quality spatial content. But Living Atlas is far more than just data. It spans the possibilities of web GIS by offering spatial content in useful ways across ArcGIS. Do you have questions about how to access, use, or contribute content to Living Atlas? Your Living Atlas questions answered by @LisaBerry provides answers to frequently asked questions. Visit the ArcGIS Living Atlas home page to learn about what's new and how to use content. See the ArcGIS Living Atlas blog for more blog articles that help you get the most out of Living Atlas.
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04-24-2024
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Esri Community Maps contributors continue to enrich the Living Atlas of the World with authoritative large-scale map layers. This first quarter includes over 300 new and updated communities, spanning 4 continents. For more information, see Basemap releases include over 300 new and updated communities. There are a variety of ways to share your organization’s authoritative map data. Interested in knowing more about Esri’s Community Maps? Click on the image below, or email us at communitymaps@esri.com. Visit the ArcGIS Living Atlas home page to learn about what's new and how to use content. See the ArcGIS Living Atlas blog for more blog articles that help you get the most out of Living Atlas.
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04-24-2024
09:14 AM
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I would highly recommend to not use that application. It's still active, but has been replaced by the new Landsat Explorer: https://www.arcgis.com/home/item.html?id=7a30da7ae1ee44248e12e99c928c4939 https://livingatlas.arcgis.com/landsatexplorer/#mapCenter=-11.398%2C21.124%2C12.000&mode=dynamic&mainScene=%7CGeology+with+DRA%7C There are a number of blog articles you will find that cover it's use: https://www.esri.com/arcgis-blog/?s=#landsat%20explorer
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04-22-2024
10:39 PM
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You will have to give me some more information. I do not understand from your brief description what the issue is, and I can't tell what app you are using. If you can provide me additional repro steps I will look into things for you, but at this point I don't have a clue how to repro your issue or even what app you are using. Thanks.
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04-22-2024
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