ESRI’s MapIt vs MapDotNet vs IDV Solutions

A couple people asked me at the ESRI UC what I thought about the ESRI MapIt announcement and how it related to MapDotNet and IDV Solutions products.   Both MapDotNet and IDV Solutions have great products and really impressive support teams so don’t expect either to just disappear anytime soon (if at all).  One thing is for sure though, MapIt is like no other ESRI product before it on how it is sold, supported and how agile the development team is.  I suspect we’ll be seeing more ESRI MapIt type products from ESRI (smaller more nimble development teams like ArcGIS Explorer and the API teams) in the coming year.

From a user standpoint, Microsoft seems to favor ESRI’s product (though one could say they were at the ESRI UC so we’ll have to see how Microsoft plays MapIt moving forward).  Enterprise customers seem to prefer ESRI, but MapIt isn’t aimed at them (I can’t tell you how many times I heard ESRI say that I didn’t need MapIt because I already had everything I needed; ArcGIS Server).  Thus this is a play for the market outside their traditional space and one that is possibly very disruptive if they can pull it off.  At the very least, MapDotNet says bring it on!

So we are starting to see the Microsoft stack get very spatial.

SQL Server 2008 Spatial + SharePoint + Silverlight = GIS

The only thing this can result in is better development tools for programmers and thus better tools for users.

Taking MapDotNet UX Studio for a spin

So reading the MapDotNet Blog and how UX Studio can load shapefiles (and SDE) into SQL Server 2008 I thought I give it a spin.  You have to download the whole UX platform to get UX Studio so make sure that you do a custom install so that you only get UX Studio (rather than the whole SDK and Web Services).  To load data into SQL Server 2008  is very simple, all you need to do is start up UX Studio and add a shapefile to the project.  Then right click on the shapefile in the data sources panel and select “Export Data”.  You’ll get a dialog that looks like this:

Click for full view

Click for full view

When you click start the file is converted from shapefile to SQL Server 2008 table.  A quick look at the table in Microsoft SQL Server Management Studio shows the whole file uploaded perfectly.  What a quick and easy way to convert your shapefiles (and SDE layers) to SQL Server 2008.  

Success!

Success!

So there you go, loading data into SQL Server 2008 requires only the free UX Studio. Nice!

ISC Releases MapDotNet UX Beta

ISC keeps pushing the .NET web mapping front and has released MapDotNET UX Beta. MapDotNet UX Server has WCF-based web services and a WPF map and tile renderer. MapDotNet UX Studio includes advanced map design (XAML editing), support for shapefiles, SQL Server 2008 as well as ArcSDE ArcGIS Server and PostGIS and tile cache management.

ISC has some demos available to show the new MapDotNet UX in action. The beta is closed at this time, but interested developers who want to showcase WPF and Silverlight mapping are encouraged to apply.  Another item to note is that the MapDotNet UX Studio will be free.  ISC describes UX Studio this way:

It (MapDotNet UX Studio) was built with the WPF map control and allows developers/cartographers to develop their map configuration file (the .mapx), create/manage tile caches, perform data import/export to all of the support data types (SQL 08, SDE, PostGIS and Shapefile) and create starter Silverlight & WPF apps.

Of course their web services will still be licensed as normal.  Some screenshots of UX Studio are below and I have to say they remind me of another product;)

Click to view large image of MapDotNet UX Studio

Click to view large image of MapDotNet UX Studio

Click to view large screenshot of UX

Click to view large image of MapDotNet UX Studio

MapDotNet Support for SQL Server 2008 Spatial

I’m sure many of us on the MapDotNet email list got the news that full support for SQL Server 2008 Spatial is right around the corner.

MapDotNet Server 6.5 is currently undergoing beta testing and will be released in November 2007. In addition to support for SQL Server 2008, it will provide support for the new features in Microsoft Virtual Earth 6.0, and will include upgraded map rendering capabilities, support for Windows Communication Foundation, profiling, event logging, and improved diagnostics.

Was there some sort of planned “event” for SQL Server 2008 today because both Manifold and Safe Software also announced SQL Server 2008 Spatial support.