Announcements

What's New in Story Maps (March 2016)

Note: This blog article covers the classic Esri Story Maps which are in mature support and scheduled to be retired in late 2025. Story authors are strongly encouraged to use the new ArcGIS StoryMaps to create stories.

For more information about transitioning to the new StoryMaps, see ArcGIS StoryMaps resources. For more information about the transition from classic Esri Story Maps to the new ArcGIS StoryMaps, see Esri Story Maps: Now in mature support.

(by Rupert Essinger, Esri Story Maps team)

ArcGIS Online has been updated with the following enhancements to Esri Story Maps. For more information about story maps, to create them, and to manage the story maps you have created, visit the Story Maps website.

Sign in with Facebook or Google and start storytelling

It’s easier for people to get started making story maps! Anyone can now simply sign into the Story Maps website or ArcGIS.com with their Facebook or Google credentials to get a free, non-commercial ArcGIS Public account.

This account doesn’t offer the full range of ArcGIS functionality that a subscription offers, such as publishing data as services, using subscriber content from the Living Atlas, and enterprise configuration. But it is an easy way to start story mapping for individuals, students, bloggers, community groups, activists, local environmental associations, small non-profits, etc.

New autoplay mode

Autoplay mode is useful if you want to show a story map on a display monitor in a visitor center, tourist information kiosk, museum exhibit, trade show, your GIS department’s reception area, operations center, etc. In autoplay mode the story advances automatically creating a visually interesting and changing display. In this mode, a control appears on-screen that allows the playback speed to be adjusted or paused.

During autoplay pause, you can interact with the story map normally and then resume autoplay. Autoplay is supported in these Story Map apps:

To enable autoplay for any story map, click the Link button in the story’s header to get a short URL to the story and, in the dialog that appears, click the new Autoplay mode check box. This will add the autoplay parameter into the short URL that is generated. You don’t need to be the owner of the story map you want to autoplay: anyone can choose to run any story map in this mode. Note that autoplay mode is not supported on small displays like phones or in small embed frames.

Story maps look better when shared on social media

When someone who reads your story map shares it on social media using the story’s Twitter and Facebook buttons, their post will automatically use the title, summary, and where possible, the thumbnail of your story, as defined in the story’s web mapping application item entry in ArcGIS Online.

To get the best looking results on social media for a story map you are sharing and promoting publicly, we recommend that you update the item entry for your story in ArcGIS Online to:

The easiest and recommended way to edit the item entry for your story map is to go to the My Stories section in the Story Maps website. You can also make these edits in My Content in ArcGIS Online. Making these edits is a recommended best practice, not just for social media sharing. Updating the fields (including the tags) and thumbnail in the item entries for apps you create makes them easier to find and makes them look better in any groups or galleries they are added to.

Changes you make to the item entry for a story may not be reflected immediately on social media posts, so we recommend that you make these edits before you start publicizing your story.

Also bear in mind that for your own story map social media posts, such as posts in your own or your organization’s Twitter feed, you can compose the post manually instead of relying on the default look you get using the Twitter and Facebook buttons in the app. For example if you look at the Esri Story Maps Twitter feed, you’ll notice that in tweets to story maps by @EsriStoryMaps and @Esri we normally use fullsize graphics to fill the space and attract attention.

Other enhancements

See how authors are presenting sets of story maps

There’s a new Format > Collections filter in the Story Maps Gallery that shows you some examples of how authors are presenting sets of story maps to their audience. This link opens the gallery with that filter applied.

Countdown and Playlist apps retired

We’ve removed the Countdown and Playlist apps from the Story Maps Apps list. Any stories created with those apps will continue to work. Neither of these apps are hosted in ArcGIS Online or included with Portal for ArcGIS: they are deployed only by downloading and self-hosting the code, so our retirement of them from the Apps list will not affect any existing deployments.

Countdown and Playlist are older application templates that we are not actively maintaining and our other Story Map apps provide similar user experiences with easier authoring and better responsive support for different display sizes. A good alternative to the Countdown app is the Bulleted layout of the Story Map Series. You can also use the Story Map Journal to show a set of places (Tip: there’s a blog post here showing developers how to add an index map to a Story Map Journal section). Alternatives to the Playlist include Story Map Tour, Shortlist and also Journal.

The code for the two apps is still available for download via Github: Countdown, Playlist. Use of these apps is now on an unsupported basis. Countdown and Playlist stories currently in the Story Maps Gallery have been moved into the Custom category.

About the author

Corporate technology evangelist and advocate at Esri, focusing on ways to broaden access to geographic information and helping customers succeed with the ArcGIS system. On a good day I'm making a map, on a great day I'm on one. Email bszukalski@esri.com or connect on LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/bernszukalski/).

Connect:
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Next Article

Harnessing the Power of Imagery: A Programmatic Approach

Read this article