Myth #1 – I can’t afford to install Pro.
This is the most common myth I
hear about Pro. ArcGIS Pro is not a new product. It’s a brand-new application
that is included with ArcGIS Desktop. ArcGIS Pro is part of your existing
ArcGIS Desktop license. No matter if you have a basic, standard or advanced
level of ArcGIS Desktop, and no matter if you’re on the latest version of
ArcGIS Desktop, or still back at version 10.3 – ArcGIS Pro is included as part
of ArcGIS Desktop.
Think of it this way: ArcGIS
Desktop includes ArcMap, ArcCatalog, ArcScene and ArcGlobe, as well as ArcGIS
Pro. It is not an additional license.
Myth #2 – I can’t move to ArcGIS Pro because we’re locked into an old version of Desktop
While ArcGIS Pro is included in
your existing ArcGIS Desktop license, I should point out that Pro is not tied
to a specific version of ArcGIS Desktop. ArcGIS Pro is a separate code base
from ArcMap and ArcCatalog. You can install the latest (or any) version of
ArcGIS Pro on the same machine as any version of ArcMap. Even
if you are locked into a specific version of ArcMap because of database
dependencies or third-party solutions, you can still install the latest version
of ArcGIS Pro on the same machine.
Myth #3 – I can’t use ArcGIS Pro because it doesn’t publish to ArcGIS Server.
Let me be clear. ArcGIS Pro can publish web maps, web layers and cached services to ArcGIS Online and ArcGIS Enterprise. In addition, ArcGIS Pro can publish services (dynamic map, feature, image, geocoding, geoprocessing, etc.) to ArcGIS Enterprise (which is what Server is now called). If you think about it, ArcGIS Pro publishes more types of information products and layer types to ArcGIS Enterprise and ArcGIS Online than does ArcMap.
ArcGIS Pro can share maps and
layers to ArcGIS Online as features, tiles or vector tiles. Layers can be
shared to ArcGIS Enterprise as features or dynamic map services, and can be
configured with options such as WMS support.
However, the way services are
secured in ArcGIS Enterprise has changed. In ArcGIS Enterprise, organizations
are strongly encouraged to implement the Portal component of ArcGIS Enterprise,
and federate their authentication with the Server component.
In the ‘old’ world, most users
simply created a server admin user and published with that. There are many
security issues associated with that, not the least of which is multiple people
using the same username and password. It’s also problematic because with that
approach, you don’t have access to the other great features of the new ArcGIS
Enterprise and ArcGIS Online world including Collector apps, groups, content
management and so on.
So, both ArcMap and Pro
can publish services, and both ArcMap and ArcGIS Pro require a user
login to do so. ArcGIS Pro has been designed to adhere to the more modern
ArcGIS Enterprise security model, so it’s mandatory that you have the Portal
component installed, and have your security of the Server component federated
with Portal. This is already the case in ArcGIS Online.
Myth #4 – ArcGIS Pro doesn’t support existing licenses and extensions.
It does. As I mentioned, ArcGIS Pro is part of your existing
ArcGIS Desktop license.
ArcGIS Pro can be configured to use your existing Concurrent Use (CU) license manager. It can be configured to use your existing Single Use (SU) license on a machine. In addition, ArcGIS Pro’s default licensing method is to leverage the benefits of your Esri Identity (ArcGIS Named User) – which, by the way, is included with your ArcGIS Desktop seat – and allow administrators to assign and manage licensing for ArcGIS Pro levels (basic, standard or advanced) and extensions (3D, Spatial Analyst, Network Analyst, etc.). The licensing mechanism you have today, the licensing level you have today, and the same extensions you have today are all available to you in ArcGIS Pro.
ArcGIS Pro can be configured to use your existing Concurrent Use (CU) license manager. It can be configured to use your existing Single Use (SU) license on a machine. In addition, ArcGIS Pro’s default licensing method is to leverage the benefits of your Esri Identity (ArcGIS Named User) – which, by the way, is included with your ArcGIS Desktop seat – and allow administrators to assign and manage licensing for ArcGIS Pro levels (basic, standard or advanced) and extensions (3D, Spatial Analyst, Network Analyst, etc.). The licensing mechanism you have today, the licensing level you have today, and the same extensions you have today are all available to you in ArcGIS Pro.
ArcGIS Pro can be licensed by the
default named user model, or can be configured to use your existing Single Use
license, or existing Concurrent Use License Manager.
Now, I would encourage everyone
to start exploring the benefits of using Esri Identity to manage who in your
organization has access to which tools and capabilities. Soon, you’ll see that
it’s much easier and simpler to manage the level of functionality for your
desktop users in the same way you manage who has access to premium apps like
Insights, Drone2Map, GeoPlanner and so on. Download arcGIS Pro here
Myth #5 – ArcGIS Pro isn’t as feature complete as ArcMap.
Well, this is a tricky one. I can
see where this myth comes from. Not every tool in ArcMap is needed in ArcGIS
Pro, and some things are done differently.
A good example is managing
utility networks. Independent from ArcGIS Pro, Esri is evolving the way we edit
and manage utility networks. ArcGIS Pro will be the tool for building and
managing the new ‘Utility Network’ model. ArcMap will be the tool for managing
the old ‘Geometric Network’. We’re not moving Geometric Network tools to
ArcGIS Pro – there is no point. Having said that, I’m only talking about editing a
Geometric Network. ArcGIS Pro can visualize the old Geometric Network, you can
only edit them in ArcMap.
Also keep in mind, ArcGIS Pro
does more than ArcMap. For example, ArcGIS Pro supports multiple
layouts, direct editing of feature services, publishing vector tile layers,
integrated 2D and 3D – the list goes on. ArcGIS Pro does more than
ArcMap, so to say it’s not equivalent to ArcMap does not make sense.
Myth #6 – ArcGIS Pro use consumes credits.
I admit when I first heard this
from customers, I was baffled. Using ArcMap does not consume credits. Using
ArcGIS Pro does not consume credits. I dug a little deeper and I think I found
the source of this myth.
What is available to you with
ArcGIS Pro are some optional “Ready-to-Use tools” that (with your Identity) connect to
ArcGIS Online.
The idea behind these tools is to
provide access to some more advanced GIS capabilities – think drainage areas,
enrichment and service areas – for those users who (a) only need these tools on
occasion, and (b) don’t have access to Desktop extensions and datasets needed.
These optional Ready-to-Use tools are not a replacement for extensions. They
are a lower cost option for casual users and do consume credits if
(and only if) they are used. Moreover, you can disable access to these tools by
managing your Identity roles in Online. And, like any credit-consuming
capability in the ArcGIS ecosystem, credits can be budgeted and managed on a user-by-user basis by the
administrator.
Myth #7 – ArcGIS Pro must be connected to ArcGIS Online.
Nope. You can use ArcGIS Pro on a
stand-alone PC, in the middle of the tundra, 2,000 kms from the nearest
Internet access point.
The difference between being
connected to ArcGIS Online or ArcGIS Enterprise in ArcGIS Pro is exactly the
same as it is with ArcMap. Obviously, if you cannot reach your servers or the
Internet, you can’t access ArcGIS Online basemaps, you can’t publish services,
you can’t use your enterprise geodatabase. But, as with ArcMap, you can
continue to use shapefiles, file geodatabases – all your local data.
ArcGIS Pro has a really cool feature that lets you take an offline copy of
your map and work on it with Pro when disconnected. There’s an additional
benefit to using the Identity or named user licensing model here. It’s much
easier to check out your ArcGIS Pro license using Online or Enterprise for
total offline use – including extensions. You can also do this with Concurrent
Use licensing. It’s not needed for Single Use.
Myth #8 – ArcGIS Pro has much higher machine specifications than ArcMap.
For day-to-day 2D GIS, ArcGIS Pro
can be run on the same machine where you’re running ArcMap. The minimum
and recommended machine specs are pretty much the same for ArcGIS Pro as they
are for ArcMap. When it comes to 3D, you will want a decent graphics card to
get acceptable performance. However, the same was true in Desktop for users who
were using ArcScene or ArcGlobe.
One other thing to keep in mind
is that ArcGIS Pro is a native 64-bit application, so it won’t install on
32-bit Windows.
In fact, given the same hardware
and a decent video card, you're likely to see ArcGIS Pro perform better in some
tasks like geoprocessing and drawing large datasets due to the fact ArcGIS Pro
is a native, multithreaded 64-bit application.
There are, however, some
differences in virtualized environments. The same multithreading and efficient
resource allocations in ArcGIS Pro that make it run faster on your stand-alone
PC mean that ArcGIS Pro will not work in non-optimal virtualized environments.
If you’re going to run Pro in a virtualized environment, you need to consider
some of the unique requirements.
Myth #9 – ArcGIS Pro doesn’t support enterprise geodatabases, including versioning.
ArcGIS Pro supports all the same
data types that ArcMap does: shapefiles, file geodatabases, CAD files, imagery.
All of it plus the Data Interoperability extension works in ArcGIS Pro.
In addition, ArcGIS Pro can connect to your existing enterprise geodatabase.
You can even use the same .sde connection files you already have. You can
connect to and edit all your existing versions. ArcGIS Pro also supports your geodatabase
features like domains, subtypes and topology. Plus, you can directly connect to database systems not configured
with the geodatabase.
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ArcGIS Pro supports full
versioned editing and existing geodatabase capabilities such as topology.
On top of all that, as I pointed
out in my earlier blog, the editing tools in ArcGIS Pro quite frankly
blow ArcMap away. So, not only can you edit versioned enterprise geodatabases
in ArcGIS Pro, the tools at your disposal to do so have improved dramatically
from ArcMap.
Add to these the task framework in ArcGIS Pro, and the fact that you
can use workflow extensions like Data Reviewerand Workflow Manager. With ArcGIS Pro, you have a very modern
and efficient environment for data editing and management. Pro also supports
all the same projections and coordinate systems and datum that ArcMap does. So,
it’s as accurate and effective for data editing and analysis as ArcMap.
Myth #10 – ArcGIS Pro will be hard to use.
I guess on this one, all I can
say is “try it”. From my experience, I can tell you, it took me a little while
to get used to the ribbon interface (it helped that I’d already moved to the
current version of MS Office). But once I moved to Pro, I have not moved
back. Again, check out my earlier blog for the things I think make ArcGIS Pro
more than ready for prime time.
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