Worldwide coverage for Google Maps, Geocoding, Routing, Elevation and Storage services directly in ArcMap. One low, per-user price for unlimited access.
Buy Now and get a free Arc2Earth Pro license!
Did you ever use Google Maps and wish you could click on your data like you were in ArcMap? Or had to delay a project because the expense and time of standing up a GIS server and configuring the software was too much? There’s no need for servers or server software, all you need is a single ArcView seat and Arc2Earth Cloud Services. Export locally, directly to your own Arc2Earth Cloud instance. Click and you’re done. And new at Arc2Earth V3, live editing with Cloud Layers. Upload and manage your data in an Arc2Earth Cloud, Google Maps Data or Open Street Map. Arc2Earth Cloud is currently in public beta testing. All Enterprise users will have access to their own Cloud instance.
Key Features
Major Components
Datasources – Upload all of your vector data and let both users and developers search and edit the features.
Tilesets – Store your map tile caches online and use them in any standard client APIs (Google Maps, OpenLayers, Microsoft Bing, ArcGIS Online)
Services – Combine attribute search and spatial operations into a single, custom REST resource
Viewers – Upload and manage your own custom Javascript and Flex viewers and use the built-in login and access control functionality
Cost Efficient Hosting – Only pay for what CPU/Bandwidth/Storage that you use in addition to generous free daily limits. We believe the significance of the Cloud is the extensive Capital and Operational savings that can be achieved. Hardware, software and IT support can be dramatically reduced.
All data available using standard REST API
Datasource API – Read, Write access to vector data using industry data standards (KML, GeoJson, GML, GeoRSS)
Tileset API – Read, Write access to all tile caches
Static Map API – All tilesets have builtin support for combining multiple tilesets on the server to create a single image
Extend your data into the Google, Bing, and OpenLayers