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Good afternoon,
I work with classroom teachers to develop science curriculum and a few of the labs we use involve the use of ImageJ. Many teachers have been receiving 1:1 Chromebooks for their students and computer labs are being phased out. ImageJ is not compatible with the Chromebook OS, without some rather extensive work-arounds that involve installing Linux, or virtual desktops. Many school districts have tight restrictions on what can be downloaded to their computers and are unable to use these workarounds. Has anyone had success using ImageJ on a chromebook in a relatively simple manner? Is there any possibility of producing a compatible version of the software? Does anyone know of possible alternative software, or ideally a web-based program that could be used instead? I’m interested in any possible solutions. -- Becky Sims Teaching Laboratory Coordinator Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research 533 Tower Road, Ithaca, NY 14853 607-254-2343 -- ImageJ mailing list: http://imagej.nih.gov/ij/list.html |
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Hi Becky,
ImageJ is written in Java, and you cannot run Java on Chromebook OS [1]. So I would be pretty amazed if anyone has gotten ImageJ to work on a Chromebook without installing Linux. In the future, if someone creates a web client which communicates with ImageJ on a remote server, this would be usable from a Chromebook. There are various ways it could work—maybe just as a "thin client" like how Photoshop on Chromebook works [2]. But no such thing exists yet. I looked around for a web-based image editing tool using HTML5, and found one called Picozu [3], but it is more geared toward drawing and photo editing, rather than scientific image processing. Regards, Curtis [1] https://www.starryhope.com/chromebooks/faq/chromebook-java/ [2] http://www.cnet.com/news/checking-out-photoshop-for-chromebooks-network-computing-revived/ [3] https://www.picozu.com/editor/ On Thu, Oct 1, 2015 at 12:28 PM, Becky Sims <[hidden email]> wrote: > Good afternoon, > > I work with classroom teachers to develop science curriculum and a few of > the labs we use involve the use of ImageJ. Many teachers have been > receiving 1:1 Chromebooks for their students and computer labs are being > phased out. ImageJ is not compatible with the Chromebook OS, without some > rather extensive work-arounds that involve installing Linux, or virtual > desktops. Many school districts have tight restrictions on what can be > downloaded to their computers and are unable to use these workarounds. > > Has anyone had success using ImageJ on a chromebook in a relatively simple > manner? Is there any possibility of producing a compatible version of the > software? Does anyone know of possible alternative software, or ideally a > web-based program that could be used instead? I’m interested in any > possible solutions. > -- > Becky Sims > Teaching Laboratory Coordinator > Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research > 533 Tower Road, Ithaca, NY 14853 > 607-254-2343 > > -- > ImageJ mailing list: http://imagej.nih.gov/ij/list.html > ... [show rest of quote] -- ImageJ mailing list: http://imagej.nih.gov/ij/list.html |
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