INTRODUCING SITESCAN
In the UC session: ArcGIS QuickCapture: An Introduction and What's New we briefly mentioned the integration between QuickCapture and Site Scan for ArcGIS - Flight Planning. The purpose of this blog is to bring you to speed with this, and tell you how you can start testing.
First of all, a bit of background on Site Scan for ArcGIS. This Esri app is used to allow drone pilots to easily collect accurate, high-resolution maps, and 3D models. It helps at the planning stage by providing access to basemaps, flight plans, overlays, and previously captured orthomosaics, and offers a variety of flight modes tailored to the type of site being scanned. Once planning is complete, the app is able to automatically conduct aircraft checks and then execute the flight. Finally, captured imagery is wirelessly transferred from the drone to an iPad, ready for upload to Site Scan Manager for processing in the cloud.
Note that the Site Scan for ArcGIS App will only run on iOS tablets and there are two versions available:
- Site Scan for ArcGIS - LE (Limited Edition) A simplified version of the app, built for ArcGIS Drone2Map users.
To find out more (as well as a list of supported drone models), please see the following Q and A.
QUICKCAPTURE INTEGRATION
The integration between ArcGIS QuickCapture and Site Scan for ArcGIS is pretty simple. The Site Scan app provides a position source to QuickCapture, meaning that instead of using the GPS of the phone, QuickCapture uses the location of the drone. The intended workflow is that operators use two tablets; one running Site Scan; and the other running QuickCapture. Site Scan is used to guide the drone (and provide a video output) and QuickCapture is used to capture records and upload them to ArcGIS.
This offers support for a number of interesting workflows. For example, you could:
The benefit of such workflows is that information coming from the drone can be pushed straight into ArcGIS, without waiting for the drone to land. Web maps and dashboards can, therefore, be fed with near real-time spatial information.
GETTING STARTED
If you don't have a drone to test, don't worry. Both versions of the Site Scan app offer a drone simulation option.
The workflow is designed for both apps to be run on different devices on the same network (so they can communicate with each other). The Site Scan app doesn't work in background mode, so you can't reliably run both apps on the same device unless you use the using multitasking feature on iPad (https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT207582). The QuickCapture app can run over the SiteScan app and you can control the drone and record the data at the same time. However: We don't recommend that one person fly the drone and simultaneously use QuickCapture for safety reasons.
To get started, some configuration of both Site Scan and QuickCapture is required:
Site Scan
QuickCapture
That is it. Take a look at the following for an example, and of course test it out yourself.
If you have any questions or feedback on this, please share them through the Early adopters' program: Welcome to our Customer Validation site.
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