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A Force for Good

Esri president Jack Dangermond said he was buoyed by the creativity of geospatial app developers.
Esri president Jack Dangermond said he was buoyed by the creativity of geospatial app developers.

Esri president Jack Dangermond told an audience of app developers that the geospatial solutions they are building today are a “positive force” in solving problems faced by society and their organizations.

“The world is not in a good place right now, don’t you agree?” Dangermond said in his opening remarks to attendees of the 2016 Esri Developer Summit(DevSummit) in Palm Springs, California. “If you look at the challenges that we are facing—from climate change to social conflict to the need to be more efficient in our organizations to overpopulation—it’s daunting. One of the great, bright lights for me is actually you and your creativity and your ability to take this technology, GIS, and leverage it into solutions that address these kinds of challenges.”

Dangermond also touched on the swift technological advances that will drive geospatial app creation in the future.

“This is an amazing year for Esri, and I hope it’s an amazing year for you,” Dangermond said. “The platform—from my experience and my 50 years of doing this kind of work—there’s never been anything like it. The opportunity to extend and expand and be creative with the kinds of tools that are coming down the pathway and are already here is unparalleled.”

More than 1,700 people packed the Palm Springs Convention Center to hear Dangermond and his colleagues from Esri share their GIS vision and work.
More than 1,700 people packed the Palm Springs Convention Center to hear Dangermond and his colleagues from Esri share their GIS vision and work.

As a 2006 ArcUser article noted, Esri launched the DevSummit—with the theme “By and for Developers”—with three goals in mind: to gather feedback from developers so that Esri could better support them, to share information, and to build a GIS development community. The DevSummit has stayed true to those goals over the past decade, helping thousands of developers create their own apps for their organizations by using Esri technology.

“This is an extendable and open architecture by designfor developers,” Dangermond said. “We design it as a platform that’s extendable and interoperable and standards based for our own use and, at the same time, document it and make available for developers like yourselves to extend and leverage.”

Dangermond also told developers to do more than drink from the fire hose of “awesome technology” during the summit. He encouraged them to meet new people and bounce ideas off each other.

“I don’t know how you learn, but the way I learn is through friendship,” he said. “How do you interpret [new information]? It’s really through other people’s experiences and sharing. I want you to build and reinforce this as a community, a friendship network that you can count on. You can count on me, and you can count on everybody at Esri to support you and what you do.”

About the author

Carla Wheeler is a former technology writer and editor at Esri and a former newspaper journalist. She graduated from the University of Minnesota with a Bachelor of Arts degree in journalism and political science. She was the previous editor of ArcWatch and worked with ArcGIS StoryMaps apps. Follow her on Twitter @gisjourno.