Re: Basic question on make movie plug in

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Re: Basic question on make movie plug in

Henson, John
I'm new to the ImageJ Interest Group and have a very basic question. I’m running a Scion firewire camera on a Mac using their ImageJ make movie plug in and it only allows for the viewing of the movie frames and not a simultaneous live image.  This makes it difficult to allow for focusing of the specimen on the fly while the movie is being captured.  Does anyone have a plug in that allows for simultaneous movie capture and live imaging?

Thanks, John

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
John H. Henson, Ph.D.
Charles A. Dana Professor of Biology
Department of Biology / Biochemistry & Molecular Biology Program
Dickinson College, Carlisle, PA 17013
Phone: 717-245-1434
E-mail: [hidden email]
http://www.dickinson.edu/departments/biol/faculty/henson.html



________________________________________
From: ImageJ Interest Group [[hidden email]] On Behalf Of prashant [[hidden email]]
Sent: Friday, June 05, 2009 8:37 AM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: Re: Compressed DICOM

On imagej "plugIn" menu choose PlugIn--->LOCI--->Bio Format Importer--->
And give path of your compressed Dicom file.

It is a plugIn from loci which handle compressed Dicom file.

thanks


-----Original Message-----
From: ImageJ Interest Group [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Tim
Crowe
Sent: Friday, June 05, 2009 5:27 PM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: Compressed DICOM

I there any way to import compressed DICOM images into ImageJ 1.42o-64-bit?

Thanks

Tim


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video input on mac/osx

Aryeh Weiss
How is video input acquireed with ImageJ on a macbook? I found some
plugins for specific cameras, as well and a plugin that acquires
though quicktime. However, I did not understand how to get this to work
with the built in camara on the macbook. My search of the archive on
osx+video did not turn up anything.

Having just moved to a mac from windows/PC , there are elementary
fuctions with which I am not yet familar, so I am sorry if this is a
silly question.  If I missed it in the archive or on the wiki, please
send the appropriate link.

Thanks in advance for your assistance.
--aryeh
--

Aryeh Weiss
School of Engineering
Bar Ilan University
Ramat Gan 52900 Israel

Ph:  972-3-5317638
FAX: 972-3-7384050
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Re: video input on mac/osx

Wayne Rasband
On Jun 5, 2009, at 10:05 AM, Aryeh Weiss wrote:

> How is video input acquireed with ImageJ on a macbook? I found some
> plugins for specific cameras, as well and a plugin that acquires
> though quicktime. However, I did not understand how to get this to
> work with the built in camara on the macbook. My search of the archive
> on osx+video did not turn up anything.
>
> Having just moved to a mac from windows/PC , there are elementary
> fuctions with which I am not yet familar, so I am sorry if this is a
> silly question.  If I missed it in the archive or on the wiki, please
> send the appropriate link.

The File>Import>Video command (QuickTime Capture plugin) should work
with the built in MacBook camera as long as you run ImageJ in 32-bit
mode by launching the "ImageJ" application instead of "ImageJ64".
QuickTime for Java does not work in 64-bit mode and Java 1.6, which is
used by "ImageJ64", only runs in 64-bit mode. There is more information
about the QuickTime Capture plugin at

      http://rsbweb.nih.gov/ij/plugins/qt-capture.html

-wayne
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Re: video input on mac/osx

Aryeh Weiss
Thank you for the quick reply. I noticed that when I tried to go that
way, I got a message abotu having to use 32 bit Java.
Is there any way of acquiring video in 64 bit mode?

--aryeh

Wayne Rasband wrote:

> On Jun 5, 2009, at 10:05 AM, Aryeh Weiss wrote:
>
>> How is video input acquireed with ImageJ on a macbook? I found some
>> plugins for specific cameras, as well and a plugin that acquires
>> though quicktime. However, I did not understand how to get this to
>> work with the built in camara on the macbook. My search of the
>> archive on osx+video did not turn up anything.
>>
>> Having just moved to a mac from windows/PC , there are elementary
>> fuctions with which I am not yet familar, so I am sorry if this is a
>> silly question.  If I missed it in the archive or on the wiki, please
>> send the appropriate link.
>
> The File>Import>Video command (QuickTime Capture plugin) should work
> with the built in MacBook camera as long as you run ImageJ in 32-bit
> mode by launching the "ImageJ" application instead of "ImageJ64".
> QuickTime for Java does not work in 64-bit mode and Java 1.6, which is
> used by "ImageJ64", only runs in 64-bit mode. There is more
> information about the QuickTime Capture plugin at
>
>      http://rsbweb.nih.gov/ij/plugins/qt-capture.html
>
> -wayne
>


--
Aryeh Weiss
School of Engineering
Bar Ilan University
Ramat Gan 52900 Israel

Ph:  972-3-5317638
FAX: 972-3-7384050