Update, 11 July 2014:
We currently have no plans to migrate the full ArcGIS for Desktop to the Mac OS. It does, however, run very well on Mac using Windows emulation software (e.g., Bootcamp). This is a high-performance environment, and many of our developers at Esri use the Mac environment as their platform.
ArcGIS Online is a web-based collaborative platform (hosted by Esri) that enables members to use, create. Windows Linux Mac OS X Authorize Esri CityEngine. Take a look at the OSGeo projects to help you find an open source technology to meet your needs or take a look at a list of Open-Source GIS Software. Free download ArcGIS ArcGIS for Mac OS X. ArcGIS is a great way to discover and use maps.
In addition, Explorer for ArcGIS will run natively on the Mac OS. Similar to the iOS app, it will work with web maps and access ArcGIS for Server services (both on premises and hosted). Explorer for ArcGIS on the Mac will be available at the 2014 User Conference.
Developers can develop native apps for Mac OS using the ArcGIS Runtime SDK for OS X.
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Note: in the ~2 years months since the post below was written, some things have changed. The 2013 Esri User Conference Q & A (July 2013) notes: “Q:Can Esri develop a simple Mac-based viewer for ArcGIS Online?” – See the answer at: http://events.esri.com/uc/QandA/index.cfm?ConferenceID=CCAEEE69-1422-2418-7F1D0EB8490B776D#sthash.V7J5INEI.dpuf . Also, “Q: When will Esri support native Mac OS and Mac hardware?” – See the answer at: http://events.esri.com/uc/QandA/index.cfm?ConferenceID=CCAEEE69-1422-2418-7F1D0EB8490B776D#sthash.V7J5INEI.dpuf.
In the late 1980s, Macintosh computers were commonplace on the desks of Esri staff. People used them to write documentation, design graphics, and write proposals. About the only thing we didn’t do with them was run Esri software.
Esri actually did make software that ran on the Apple platform at one time. This was back in the early 1981, when a short-lived product called “Gridapple” was released for the pre-Mac Apple II platform. Gridapple was the first microcomputer implementation of Esri’s raster-based “Grid” system.
In the early 1990s, during the early days of ArcView, Esri was working on a port of ArcView to the Macintosh, but due to engineering challenges it never got beyond pre-release.
As it does every year, the question came up again at the 2011 Esri International User Conference: “When will ArcGIS Run on a Mac?” This question was addressed at the UC Closing Session on Friday.
“We’d love to be on the Mac, but we have engineering priorities…so we have to ask ourselves what’s most important for our users,” said Jack Dangermond. “That focus is very important and we want to make sure that we don’t spread our resources too thin. In theory, we could spread our resources more on platforms and thus less on functionality. But would you want us to slow down advancement of the basic tool in order to deploy on a Mac?”
Of the approximately 1,600 people attended the Closing Session, only one or two people raised their hands.
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But don’t count a Mac version of ArcGIS out yet. Dangermond added “We’ll probably start moving more towards supporting the Mac at the next release after ArcGIS 10.1.”
Scott Morehouse provided a little more detail: “The architecture changes we’re making with ArcGIS 10.1 are allowing us to break some of the deep integration with Windows that we’ve built through the component architecture. That complexity of moving to the Mac is getting easier because the component architecture is going away. This is helping us work better on Linux and other environments and that engineering work does allow us to work more on building a native Mac OS application. The problem is figuring out how to allocate resources to support Window versus Mac or the lightweight clients like Android, mobile hosted services, etc. So it’s a technical problem. It’s also a resource problem.”
Meanwhile, Apple users are not left high and dry—there are several options available to let you use your Apple devices as entry points into the ArcGIS system. “I see this issue three ways,” said Chris Cappelli, a self-professed Mac bigot. “First, we’re aggressively supporting the iOS platform for mobile Mac users so they can leverage online GIS and the ArcGIS system. Secondly, our browser-based products like ArcGIS Explorer Online can be used on a Mac. When I need to make maps on my Mac, I always use ArcGIS Explorer Online. Lastly, if I ever need to run ArcGIS Desktop, I have a virtual machine that runs Windows 7. I can run ArcGIS Desktop from there.”
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Guest blog by Micah Williamson, Geospatial Services Manager at Cloudpoint Geographics Inc.
I really “grew up “ in the Geographic Information Systems (GIS) field using ArcGIS. I started using Esri Products in college in spring of 2000, That was my first GIS class at Illinois State University. We used ArcView 3.1 and ArcInfo 7.0.1. I know ArcGIS was out as Version 8, but it wasn’t in our labs so I didn’t even know about it. At my first job they had an old Sun Solaris workstation that apparently ran one of the first versions of Arc – and by the time I got there it was sitting in the back gathering dust. ArcGIS had to run on pretty serious workstations back then; A coworker with the largest PC named his “Beast” it probably had 512 MB of RAM or something ridiculous (editors note: LOL!). The modern version of ArcGIS desktop is ArcMap, which has always looked like a Windows program. In fact there were rumors that it ran on the same “chassis” as MS Word. ArcMap is the core program that GIS practitioners used to create and edit spatial data and maps. It is much like AutoDesk in that there is a paper space as well as a data view. In many circles ArcGIS and ArcMap are the same thing. In fact ArcGIS is the name given to the entire suite of GIS software from Esri. Most of the same practitioners only use one or two products of ArcGIS.
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Fast forward to 2011 when I was introduced to my first MacBook (GIS people really live totally in a PC world). In the 90s and 2000’s, I assume Apple had enough to keep it self busy without trying to hard to get into the GIS market! Most Apple users I knew were graphic designers, and we didn’t want them making maps anyway (no offense to graphic designers!). I was given a MacBook and told to get our county GIS on to the Apple store. The only interaction at that time that Esri had for GIS on Mac OS X was through a browser. With the help of the Esri team, we got an app up and running after a few long months. The app that we created used RESTful end points as the web hook into the data. These hooks were put into Xcode and the rest is app history (literally because it’s not longer in the iTunes Store). As a unintended consequence my time on that Macbook got me hooked into the Apple world. Since the time I have stubbornly and sometimes be grudgingly used my MacBook with ArcGIS. That is only due to using Parallels. At first I used Bootcamp to realize the whole power of the Macbook. That was too much rebooting and I worked my way through every virtualization software out there. I kept coming back to Parallels.
Currently I boot into windows several times a week for ArcGIS Desktop use, if not everyday – ArcMap is the flagship product from Esri. This runs easily and without too much effort on Parallels. We create maps, create applications, edit data, run extensions, and install Esri add-ons all without hardly a hiccup. I like to joke to my co-workers that my Parallels Windows 10 install is cleaner and more efficient than their PC Bloat-ware ridden laptops. I do allocate a full 8bg of RAM to the install and 2GB of vGPU – This is excessive for ArcMap but not for it’s little brother ‘ArcGIS Pro’. Pro (as it’s been shortened to) is a complete re-write of ArcGIS desktop. It’s not without STRONG opposition that Esri is moving this way. They spent months and months telling us users that it is not a replacement of ArcMap. So no one took it seriously, but it is. ArcMap is a single threaded 32-bit application. It has it’s severe limits. The minimum requirements of ArcPro are hefty. I recently completed my first application completely using Pro. It was painful. The latest version is a bit better and it will continue to improve. My current list of Esri Related products running on Windows 10 (Dual Screens) with Parallels is: ArcGIS Desktop 10.4 (ArcMap, ArcCatalog ArcScene, ArcGlobe), ArcGIS Pro 1.2, ArcEarth, ArcPad 10.2, ArcPad Studio, Operations Dashboard and ArcGIS Collector (Beta). None of these applications can run on OS X. Plus supporting applications like MS Access 2016 , Excel 2016, Fiddler4 & Python IDLE.
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Yes, ArcGIS is going more to the web-based SaaS, as well as 3D. Even now there are several Esri applications that can run on OS X but they all pull content from the web. There is going to be more live streaming of data and clint-side rendering within GIS applications. GPU and rendering is a huge issue as is network bandwidth. I don’t exactly know what direction Esri is going with their 3D rendering engine, but it would be great is Parallels could coincide with that in the future (there is a funky flashing effect that Pro has while rendering 3D if Parallels is not set up properly, as well ArcEarth shows up blank if a proxy is enabled in the internet options of IE).
As for me, I plan on getting a New MacBook this year with Retina display so that i will have an actual GPU to utilize and most likely review Pro on Parallels again after that!