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Generate satellite maps from 80+ Copernicus layers across 12 categories. Draw a polygon or search a location, select years, and download GeoTIFF data or PDF/HTML/DOCX reports with AI narratives.
Compare satellite imagery across years or spectral indices with 8 layer types (RGB, NDVI, NDWI, NDMI, LST, Night LST, Light Pollution, UTFVI). Visualize changes in Grid, Swipe, Timeline, or Opacity mode.
Browser-based GIS toolkit: upload GeoJSON or KML files, apply spatial operations (buffer, union, simplify, dissolve, bbox, hull, centroid, split), and export results in GeoJSON, KML, or WKT format.
Professional GIS editor — layer management, drawing tools, geoprocessing, AI assistant, attributes table, and raster georeferencing
Answers to the most common questions about this tool
The GIS Editor is an interactive, browser-based GIS map editor with a built-in AI assistant. It offers full layer management, drawing tools, raster upload with georeferencing, 9 geoprocessing operations, an attributes table, measurements, version history, and multi-format export — all from a full-screen satellite map interface.
The AI assistant is a real LLM (Gemini) served via the lambda-agents backend, not a keyword-matching mock. It accepts natural-language commands and questions, uses function calling to execute operations on the map, remembers the conversation context within a session, and persists the chat across page refreshes via sessionStorage.
The assistant can perform every operation available manually: draw features (marker, circle, polygon, line, rectangle), measure area and distance, change style (fill and border independently), analyze an area, get point info, export to KML/GeoJSON/CSV, rename/delete/hide layers, run geoprocessing (buffer, dissolve, centroid, simplify, transform CRS, intersection, difference, clip), create/update/delete features, and edit attribute table values.
Vector: KML, GeoJSON, Shapefile (ZIP), and GeoPackage. Raster: PNG, JPG, TIFF, and PDF, with 4-point control-point georeferencing to place the image on the map.
You can export layers and analysis results as KML, GeoJSON, and CSV. These formats are compatible with all major GIS software such as QGIS, ArcGIS, and Google Earth.
No. The chat panel is a fixed side panel anchored to the right edge of the screen — you can only open and close it from the toolbar on the left. The map automatically resizes to make room when the panel is open.
Yes, for advanced operations. Your first geoprocessing operation is free and the first 3 AI chat messages per session are free. After that, geoprocessing operations cost 0.1–0.2 credits each and AI chat messages cost 0.1 credits per message. Basic features — layer management, drawing, measurement, file upload, and export — are always included. You get 10 free credits on signup.
The interface is optimized for desktop use: the map takes the full width and the side chat panel needs screen space. On mobile the page remains usable but the experience is reduced — map pan and zoom are restricted to avoid conflicts with page scrolling. For a complete workflow we recommend a desktop or a tablet in landscape mode.