Dear All:
I am having trouble getting the ImageJ 3D Viewer to work in a 64-bit environment. The plugin works beautifully in various 32-bit environments (Windows XP, OS X Leopard, or Ubuntu), but I have large image stacks and need more memory. Also, the plugin worked fine with these stacks on someone else's computer under 64-bit Vista, but I don't have access to that setup anymore. I run it from Fiji, so Java3D etc. should be installed properly. I'd be most grateful for suggestions, especially if someone has this plugin running in a similar environment: - Motherboard Intel D975XBX "BadAxe" - Processor Intel Core 2 Duo - Memory 8 GB RAM - Graphics Card ATI FireGL V5200 64-bit operating systems I have tried: - Windows 7 RC with built-in FireGL driver (no Windows 7 drivers from ATI yet): plugin opens and processes the stack (judging from the progress bar), but fails to display an image in the plugin window within a reasonable time frame. The task manger suggests that it is frozen. - Ubuntu 9.04 Jaunty Jackalope: no OpenGL-capable driver available (ATI dropped support for the V5200, the open-source drivers aren't 3D- capable, and older ATI drivers are incompatible). - Ubuntu 8.10 Intrepid Ibex: plugin processes the stack; displays an image that can be rotated, translated, etc.; exports .obj files. However, clicking on the plugin's menu bar causes the image to be blanked out; while animation is running, the dropdown menus flicker on and off; and recording a 360deg rotation gives mostly blank frames. - My Macs max out at 1-2 GB RAM, so 64-bit OS X is not an option. Based on googling and the occasional error message, I suspect that the graphics-card driver has an OpenGL or Java3D problem. However, I have not found any specific suggestions, and both graphics drivers and Java are an enigma to me. Since the plugin works under 64-bit Vista, I could buy a license; however, I don't want to spend a couple hundred dollars to find out that this particular graphics card doesn't work, and I have not other use for Vista. Thanks for any help or troubleshooting ideas, Richard -- Richard Kollmar, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Dpt. of Molecular & Integrative Physiology and Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign 427A Burrill Hall 407 S. Goodwin Ave., MC-114 Urbana, IL 61801 Tel. 217-333-9861 FAX 217-333-1133 |
Hi Richard,
> I am having trouble getting the ImageJ 3D Viewer to work in a 64-bit > environment. The plugin works beautifully in various 32-bit environments > (Windows XP, OS X Leopard, or Ubuntu), but I have large image stacks and > need more memory. Also, the plugin worked fine with these stacks on > someone else's computer under 64-bit Vista, but I don't have access to > that setup anymore. I run it from Fiji, so Java3D etc. should be > installed properly. > > I'd be most grateful for suggestions, especially if someone has this > plugin running in a similar environment: > - Motherboard Intel D975XBX "BadAxe" > - Processor Intel Core 2 Duo > - Memory 8 GB RAM > - Graphics Card ATI FireGL V5200 > > 64-bit operating systems I have tried: > > - Windows 7 RC with built-in FireGL driver (no Windows 7 drivers from > ATI yet): plugin opens and processes the stack (judging from the > progress bar), but fails to display an image in the plugin window within > a reasonable time frame. The task manger suggests that it is frozen. > > - Ubuntu 9.04 Jaunty Jackalope: no OpenGL-capable driver available (ATI > dropped support for the V5200, the open-source drivers aren't 3D- > capable, and older ATI drivers are incompatible). > > - Ubuntu 8.10 Intrepid Ibex: plugin processes the stack; displays an > image that can be rotated, translated, etc.; exports .obj files. > However, clicking on the plugin's menu bar causes the image to be > blanked out; while animation is running, the dropdown menus flicker on > and off; and recording a 360deg rotation gives mostly blank frames. > > - My Macs max out at 1-2 GB RAM, so 64-bit OS X is not an option. > > Based on googling and the occasional error message, I suspect that the > graphics-card driver has an OpenGL or Java3D problem. However, I have > not found any specific suggestions, and both graphics drivers and Java > are an enigma to me. > > Since the plugin works under 64-bit Vista, I could buy a license; > however, I don't want to spend a couple hundred dollars to find out that > this particular graphics card doesn't work, and I have not other use for > Vista. Since there are no appropriate drivers for Windows 7 RC and Ubuntu 9.04, it makes probably not much sense to follow these up further. So for Ubuntu 8.10, could you post the output of ->Help->Java3D Properties? Also, are you using a recent version of the 3D Viewer? I made some changes regarding animation and recording, which is now already quite some time ago, but could maybe make a difference. All in all, I assume you are right that the problem is caused by the graphics driver. I just did some googling and found some info about proprietary ATI drivers. In case you haven't seen it, you might want to give it a try. The firegl v5200 driver for 64bit was updated very recently, I realized: http://support.amd.com/us/gpudownload/Pages/index.aspx http://www2.ati.com/drivers/linux/linux_8.25.18.html I guess that this driver should work on both ubuntu versions. Best, Bene |
In reply to this post by Richard Kollmar
Dear Bene:
Excellent suggestions; I'm on the road until Monday and will test them as soon as I get back to the lab. Incidentally, the graphics card that had worked for me on someone else's 64-bit system had been an NVIDIA Quadro FX 4600 with a price of about $2,000. You do very nice and heavy-duty reconstructions, renderings, and animations for a living. What types of graphics cards do you (or other list members) use? Are workstation cards with their optimized drivers worth the premium over a fast gaming card for ImageJ 3D work? The only review on the subject I could find was at tomshardware.com; the benefits seemed to vary a lot with the specific application and not linearly related to price, clock speed, memory size, or other properties. Thanks a lot, Richard |
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