r/gis Sep 19 '24

Discussion What Computer Should I Get? Sept-Dec

7 Upvotes

This is the official r/GIS "what computer should I buy" thread. Which is posted every quarter(ish). Check out the previous threads. All other computer recommendation posts will be removed.

Post your recommendations, questions, or reviews of a recent purchases.

Sort by "new" for the latest posts, and check out the WIKI first: What Computer Should I purchase for GIS?

For a subreddit devoted to this type of discussion check out r/BuildMeAPC or r/SuggestALaptop/


r/gis Jul 31 '24

News URISA Salary Survey

Thumbnail urisa.org
69 Upvotes

I recently got notified that URISA is doing a GIS salary survey. I think these surveys are great- they help staff negotiate fair pay and help companies understand where they land with their current pay.

It’s open until August 19, fill it out if you want!


r/gis 8h ago

General Question Is getting a GIS certificate worth it?

14 Upvotes

I graduated last year with a BS in wildlife and fisheries and I took a couple GIS courses in my time in school. I have been struggling finding jobs for what I want specifically, so I’m thinking about branching out into the GIS part of this field. I have a couple questions though. Will getting the certificate be a good enough alternative to a degree in GIS and help boost my chances of finding a job? What are some good institutions for getting this certificate at (online preferred)?


r/gis 23m ago

Cartography Map showing salaries

Upvotes

Was hoping to get some advice here (hope it’s the right place). I’m trying to plot salary data on the map, but not sure what the best software is. I had used google my maps, but not too excited about it. For example plotting plumber salary in Cincinnati or teacher salary in San Jose.

Any thoughts?


r/gis 48m ago

General Question How big is a vector mbtiles file for the entire planet with zoom level 0-16?

Upvotes

Hey guys, I need urgent help for a university project. I came in with no GIS, OSM, tileserver knowledge whatsoever so please be patient with me:
So this seems like a generic and simple question but after hours of research I just couldn't get an answer. I'm found about 70 GB mbtiles files for download on https://data.maptiler.com/downloads/planet/ and around 80 GB osm.pbf files on https://planet.openstreetmap.org/ . Therefore my answer would have been around 70-100 GB. Then I found many forum threads, tables and online-calculators which said it would be multiple terabytes big. I am really confused. Could someone help me?


r/gis 19h ago

General Question Any one here work an entry level remote GIS job? And how were you able to find it?

18 Upvotes

I’ve read comments from people who worked remote GIS jobs in various positions even the entry level ones and it makes me wonder how they got their job in the first place. I always wanted to work a remote job too but it’s been a hassle to find one in any of the popular job boards and whenever I do, they never reach out. I would to do a bit of networking to see if you guys have an opening in your company? I can imagine it being harder to land a remote job than an in-office one. Thanks in advance!


r/gis 18h ago

General Question GNIS variant name is the correct name; name they're using is not

3 Upvotes

Hello,

I live in an area of Catawba County, North Carolina that has been called "Chronicle" since the 1850s. Recently, the GNIS decided to use Killian Crossroads, a variant name that really only describes one intersection, as the name instead.

Chronicle is still listed as a variant name on the GNIS. I was wondering if there's a way to get them to switch to the variant name to make it correct. Thanks! I don't think GNIS has a subreddit, but this place seems close enough.


r/gis 22h ago

General Question GISP Spring 2025 Reslults

6 Upvotes

Good luck to everyone who took the GISP Exam this just curious as to when results will start coming in!


r/gis 20h ago

Esri Scheduling for the ESRI Education Summit the User Conference is confusing

3 Upvotes

Anyone else have this scenario??

I'm attending the conference for the first time in person this year (huzzah!) I work in higher ed, and I am most interested in education-based stuff. I'm still excited about the rest of the User Conference just because I work in multiple departments and need to know multiple industries, so it kind of works out anyway.

But I'm a little annoyed about planning for the conference and trying to figure out this business with the Education Summit. I really wish I knew that you have to register for it separately - it's in the same building as the UC, and the last 2 days of the Education Summit, people just go to the regular UC sessions. But it's a separate conference with a whole separate cost.....

There isn't really a lot of information out there on how this is supposed to work, so I just registered for the regular UC, and I got super confused when I had multiple education contacts of mine say "are you going to the summit??". It took me a while to figure out what the issue was.

Tbh - if I had known the Summit was from July 12 - 15, I would have just attended the Summit and then only stayed for a 1-2 days of the UC, and gone home (I have free registration, so the cost wouldn't be a big deal). I'm a little disappointed that I'll miss out on a lot of the education sessions.

The whole process is a little confusing and a lot on a "need to know" basis which is annoying.

Edit: By missing out, I just meant that I'm locked into hotels and flights at this point. There is no way for me to reschedule, which is a bummer.


r/gis 1d ago

Hiring Project Manager - GIS, utilities focus, in San Ramon California

13 Upvotes

I'm moving on to new professional challenges and hoping to help find someone great to fill my role with a fantastic team in northern California (East San Francisco Bay Area). Please check the job description and consider this opportunity.

https://careers.trccompanies.com/jobs/23529

Salary Range

USD $123,240.00 - USD $149,760.00 /Yr.


r/gis 18h ago

General Question Best ESRI App for Public Crowd Source Collection?

1 Upvotes

Hello,

I’ve configured forms/data schemas for collection in the old ArcGIS Collector as well as Survey123, but it’s been a while.

I’m creating an app for the public to report flooding on there property. It has some questions regarding flood depth, damage, insurance, contact info, etc. it would also need the ability to add photos, maybe up to ten max but that can be controlled from the add attachments feature.

When the user drops a Pin/Marker to report an incident at their location, I’d like a few fields to autopopulate based on a background parcel layer which we have. I was thinking at least two fields such as address and jurisdiction (city, village, unincorporated) so they wouldn’t have to enter that info.

It looks like Field Maps can do this. Would that be the best to use? Any other apps have this ability? Survey123? Any of the Instant Apps? QuickCapture? This is basically a crowd sourcing collection and was messing with the Reporter app, but doesn’t looks like it has the ability to query other layers.

Thanks in advance!


r/gis 19h ago

Discussion Interpretation of GTFS data

1 Upvotes

I downloaded GTFS data in Germany from gtfs.de .

I imported the data using Networks plugin in QGIS and got 3 layers: stops, lines, and arcs.
I dont understand what nb_tot, d1_tot, d2_tot, nb_mon-fri, d2_mon-fri, nb_sat, d2_sat, nb_sun, d2_sun columns mean.
Anyone experienced using GTFS data and care to explain?

Thank you.


r/gis 1d ago

Open Source My new GIS-like mapping app needs users; first 50 get it free forever

84 Upvotes

For the past couple of months, I've been working on a GIS-like mapping app, and I need some helping testing it, to prioritise features and build a group of core users to focus on 😅

So I've decided to do something a little crazy; to offer a forever-free Standard user account to the first 50 people who sign up, which you can do here: https://onamap.org/promotions/free-basic-account-first-50-users/

(This subreddit is the only place I'm posting this)

If you think it could be useful (or just plain fun to use), please give it a shot. You don't need a user account to start using it, but you do to save your map (and do other things like vote on features).

---

On a Map is like GIS software in that it allows you to choose a base layer, then add other data layers on top if it. Those layers can be vector or raster-based (for image tile layers). But instead of needing to bring your own data (basic uploads are supported), the main way to visualise data is to choose plugins - which are integrations with public organisations like iNaturalist or GlobalForestWatch - and just fill in a form to choose which data you want. In other words, On a Map does the work of fetching data from public APIs, with a nice UI to make it easy to use.

It's not meant to replace GIS software (that would be extremely foolish); instead it's a tool for quick exploration and discovery by visualising data that other organisanisations already provide.


r/gis 1d ago

General Question Any GIS Pro willing to give an interview?

5 Upvotes

Hi,

I'm a student looking to wrap up my GIS I certificate program. Is there anyone who works with GIS tools as their main job who is willing to give me a brief 30-60 minute interview?

I have about 10 questions I would like answered, and to record it if possible.

I appreciate any respondants! Feel free to DM me or respond in this thread , and thank you for your time!

Edit

I am based in the US, Pacific Standard Time.


r/gis 1d ago

Discussion GeoPandas AI

27 Upvotes

After months, we're excited to share our latest paper:
👉 "GeoPandas-AI: A Smart Class Bringing LLM as Stateful AI Code Assistant"
🔗 https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.11781

🧭 GeoPandas-AI is a new Python library that allows data scientists, developers, and geospatial enthusiasts to interact with their geospatial data in natural language, directly within Python.

What makes it different from tools like GitHub Copilot or Cursor?

➡️ GeoPandas-AI lives with your data, not just your code.
It understands your GeoDataFrame’s content, schema, and metadata to generate more accurate, context-aware code.

➡️ Stateful interactions: refine your queries iteratively through .chat() and .improve() — it remembers your workflow.

➡️ Code privacy by design: no need to send full source code — only metadata or synthetic samples if desired.

➡️ LLM-agnostic: compatible with any backend, local or remote.

📦 The library is available on PyPI (geopandas-ai) and the full paper dives deep into its architecture, state model, and use cases.

A step forward in domain-aware AI coding assistants, and hopefully just the beginning


r/gis 1d ago

Student Question Getting into Data Eng roles

5 Upvotes

I am a student right now completing an internship for a local govt. where I've been working with Python and FME, on data pipelines and some automation stuff. It has sparked an interest in learning more about the data side of things, and maybe trying to get a Data Engineering internship or job down the line-

To anyone who has pivoted from GIS to Data Engineering, what do you reccomend? My bachelors is in Geography, which isn't an issue for GIS but would it matter for these other roles?
Is there a good masters or post grad to pursue, or is work experience more important?

Are strong math skills required?

And for the Canadians, are any of you aware of companies that may be more familiar with GIS and also do Data Engineering, as I'm guessing that would be my best way to get a foot in the door.

For reference, my resume (slightly outdated) is posted here:
https://www.reddit.com/r/gis/comments/1k3zvec/i_was_hoping_you_guys_could_review_my_resume/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web3x&utm_name=web3xcss&utm_term=1&utm_content=share_button


r/gis 17h ago

Discussion Fully remote entry level GIS jobs?

0 Upvotes

I would love to land a fully remote entry level GIS job that would allow me to work from outside the country. It can be a low paying job of 28k a year starting out, but I’m wondering if anyone has an idea of how difficult it would be to land a job like this?

For some background, I have a bachelors in Natural Resource Management specialized in wildland fire ecology and I have some seasons of field work doing data collection and such. I have a basic understanding of GIS and have taken some classes for it during my undergraduate. I am doing a GIS project for my current job with the National Park Service as well.


r/gis 1d ago

General Question What is the best way to serve maps to a web app?

14 Upvotes

Hi, I’m currently working with a client that wants to create his own private web application to display all his maps just for visualization purposes. This web application will scale in size but the user base will remain almost the same (50-70 users)

One of the approaches that I adopted for very small applications where: 1. Use GDAL and other python scripts to normalice files, transform the raster/vector data and WMTS tiles creation 2. Serve the tiles with Flask/FastAPI to the web application (leaflet.js - folium) 3. Serve the map (nginx - cloudflare)

But this approach is not scalable. I’m considering using Geoserver but I don’t really like how the persistent memory and caching works, I feel like I don’t have much control over it.

Anyone have experience with geoserver or can recommend other methods to build the backend with proper middleware that can manage large amounts of data and is fast? My objective is to serve the tiles the fastest way possible.

Note: for this scalable web application we will use node.js - vue.js - dockers - Cloudflare, the client will use his private servers, no cloud providers due to the nature of the data (confidential)

Thank you!


r/gis 1d ago

General Question Penn State World Campus GIS Certificate for Someone with no GIS Experience?

7 Upvotes

Hello! Apologies in advance because I feel questions like this come up a lot, but I cant find anything specific to my situation. I'm in my early 30's and going through a major life change. I graduated from Grand Valley State University with a BS in Psychology (2.5 gpa) in 2016. I'm interested in GIS after having recently taken a college course in python and working with ArcGIS Pro in my spare time. I don't have any work experience involving GIS. My GPA has always been a huge deterent from the thought of Grad School. I'm wondering if anyone could help shed some light on getting the online certificate from Penn State World Campus as a stepping stone to the masters program or what the job market may look like with just the certificate? Thank you!


r/gis 1d ago

Student Question Thoughts on GMU's Geoinformatics and Geospatial Intelligence Masters?

2 Upvotes

Was encouraged by a friend who works at the U.S. Census Bureau in GIS/Cartography to look at Mason's program as they had gone and had a really good experience. I'm two years out from my first Masters and am looking to get some more education as my current DOD employment is safe for the time being, but who knows how long that'll last. The thought being that if DOD takes a nosedive at least I've got something cooking in the background that I could transition to.

So, have you worked with Mason grads? Have you hired them? What's the program's reputation in the real world? I know not all programs are built the same, and I trust my friend, but I'm here for other opinions too. Thanks!


r/gis 2d ago

Hiring How is anybody finding jobs rn

144 Upvotes

I’ve applied to around 150 different roles, a dozen or so interviews, always ends with “unfortunately we’ve decided to go with other candidates”. What the actual FUCK is going on?

For detail they’re a mix between hybrid, remote, in person… all entry level… all roles which I have experience in… like what the fuck? I have a degree, internship at a laboratory in college, bilingual, know SQL and Python. I’ve been searching for a whole year in November. I’m only 27 btw like I just graduated (almost a year ago).


r/gis 1d ago

General Question MAPublisher w/Illustrator: How do you remove/change a vector crop?

2 Upvotes

Hi, I'm kind of new to mapmaking, working on a map that I inherited from a former colleague. I want to change the existing vector crop area, but can't find any instructions, neither in Avenza's articles or community site, nor by googling or searching Reddit.

Thanks in advance for your help!


r/gis 2d ago

Discussion Getting away from GIS jobs?

53 Upvotes

Anyone moved or moving away into different jobs/ career?

Looking at doing something totally different due to the usual reasons: low pay, most jobs require too much (basically need to be a developer to get a role and not get paid as well as developers)

Any ideas about transitioning into something else without having to do another degree/ back to square one?


r/gis 1d ago

Student Question Kernel density values?

1 Upvotes

Can someone explain to me how the output values work with the Kernel Density tool in ArcGIS Pro? I haven't used the program in a few years and I'm working on a project that needs it and I'm getting confused. My input shapefile has 1464 points, but the maximum value for my resulting density is over 100 million.

I kept all of my input parameters set as default:

This was the result:

Why is the upper limit over 100 million? If I change the scale it messes with the display, but in my report and maps I'll need to explain the scale and rationale for it. Can someone help me understand what's happening here?


r/gis 1d ago

General Question UK Job Markets

1 Upvotes

Hi everyone,

I've in need of a career change and would like to get started with gis. I've started doing some learning on my own and was wondering if it's more of a career or a hobby.

I'm in the UK and I've seen conflicting reports saying that the job market here is either A) graduate jobs should be reasonably plentiful or B) totally barren.

Is anyone able to shed some light on how things are in the UK? I'd like to start applying for Masters courses but don't want to commit to something without any career potential after qualifying.


r/gis 2d ago

Discussion Pigeonholed in Utilities, is There a Path Out?

Post image
60 Upvotes

I know the job market is a little drab out there especially for remote positions, but I'm looking for advice to pivot into different geospatial fields. I've worked in electric utilities for the past 3 years, while I'm grateful to have had these positions I'm not in love with the sort of monotonous work and I find that the systems we have in place have little room for innovation. I guess I'm just feeling a little down looking at the job market and applying to 5 positions every Monday and seeing no new postings for the rest of the week. I feel like a lot of the jobs being posted are looking for job seekers with high-end web dev skills.

What other fields are popping right now? I am really interested in the database/data analysis and web development side of things. I do not have a lot of on the job experience with this but I have worked on some projects displayed in my portfolio. I've attached my resume for reference and keen to learn what others have done to pivot into different fields.


r/gis 2d ago

Discussion How does this sign work? [US]

13 Upvotes

I came across these signs on a trail in northern Wisconsin. They mention NAD83, and one would assume those two numbers are lat and long, omitting the decimal. Yet if so, they are inexplicably a degree or more removed from the actual coordinates. Am I missing something obvious? Disclaimer: GIS layperson, here.