Chapters 5 and 6 of Getting to Know Web GIS dive deeper into how to share and organize maps online in an orderly fashion for GIS work. Chapter 5 explains ArcGIS dashboards. ArcGIS dashboards let you pull together live maps, charts, and indicators to tell a real-time story with your data. ArcGIS dashboards are like mindmaps or hw sites that let you pull all info into one spot to get the full picture. Dashboards can be used to monitor activity, like tracking wildfires, traffic, or even your own data feeds. The cool part is how everything is connected. Clicking something in one panel updates the rest instantly. Chapter 6 then shifts gears to ArcGIS StoryMaps, which turns GIS data into a kind of interactive narrative. You can mix maps with text, images, and videos to guide people through your data like a story instead of just showing them raw info. It feels more creative and expressive than the dashboards in my opinion. Together, these chapters show how GIS isn’t just for data management it’s also for communication and presentation. Reading them gave me ideas for how I could use my own data, like turning my walking route maps into a live dashboard that tracks my total distance and then wrapping that into a StoryMap showing how my routes change over the seasons.