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Re: On a personal note

Posted by Avital Steinberg on Nov 17, 2014; 6:18am
URL: http://imagej.273.s1.nabble.com/On-a-personal-note-tp5010450p5010472.html

Dear Johannes,

As a person who was used to either working with a user friendly, graphical
user interface kind of software, or software which can only be used by
developers, I was very impressed with Fiji and ImageJ. It can be used by
scientists from different backgrounds and levels of coding skills. I've
also met many people from the life sciences who were inspired by Fiji's
macro recording capability, to start writing code. (since most of the code
has already been written for them)

Thank you for taking part in the development of a very important research
tool. Good luck and enjoy your sabbatical. As for the rest of the ImageJ
and Fiji developers - your hard work is appreciated!

Avital

On Fri, Nov 14, 2014 at 8:27 PM, Johannes Schindelin <
[hidden email]> wrote:

> Dear community,
>
> almost seven years ago, I started the Fiji project to address the need for
> a user-friendly distribution of ImageJ with life-science specific plugins
> on the one side and for a developer-friendly platform on which new image
> processing and analysis components can be built on the other.
>
> A lot happened in the meantime!
>
> - Many useful plugins were added to the Fiji distribution, e.g. the
>   Trainable Segmentation (sporting advanced machine learning "hidden"
>   behind a very intuitive and easy-to-use graphical user interface) or
>   several bleeding-edge plugins to process and analyze light-sheet
>   microscopy (SPIM) images.
>
> - We saw that the updater was the singularly most popular feature - both
>   for developers and users, because it made the interaction between these
>   two groups of scientists much easier - and extended its functionality
>   e.g. to allow for personal update sites.
>
> - We saw the need for a robust next-generation data processing library and
>   came up first with ImgLib, later with the even better ImgLib2.
>
> - We then joined ranks with the ImageJ2 project, lifting the complete Fiji
>   project to a new level of professional, industry-grade software
>   development.
>
> - During a hackathon with representatives of KNIME, OMERO and Icy, the
>   SciJava project was started, identifying commonly needed functionality
>   and putting it into highly reusable, robustly developed software
>   libraries.
>
> - An incredibly successful paper was published in Nature Methods, cited
>   almost a thousand times at the time of writing (according to Google
>   Scholar).
>
> - Many development techniques and best practices emerged that now benefit
>   the entire developer community.
>
> - Developer and web resources are now provided by LOCI in Madison, WI,
>   USA, being much more scalable than our first server.
>
> - The Fiji wiki was transmogrified into the Fiji/ImageJ wiki, with the two
>   entry points http://fiji.sc and http://imagej.net being backed by the
>   same, community-driven content.
>
> - Fiji development is busier than ever, and the web site access numbers
>   have climbed from a humble 4,870 unique visitors in January 2009 to
>   320,365 unique visitors in October 2014.
>
> For me personally, Fiji has landed me a job at the MPI-CBG in Dresden,
> Germany, getting free reign to work on Fiji for one year, then getting the
> opportunity to use Fiji extensively while leading the image processing
> facility for two years. I had the flattering invitation to work with Kevin
> Eliceiri and Curtis Rueden at the University Wisconsin-Madison originally
> intended for two years, then extended to a third year, and I just returned
> to Dresden to work with PAvel Tomancak.
>
> The work on Fiji put me in touch with many excellent scientists in all
> kinds of exciting places (Barcelona, New York, Paris, San Francisco, and
> many more) and while funding was always a concern, I had many an
> encouraging feedback from literally hundreds of users.
>
> After such a long time of sustained committment and dedication, it is time
> to take a slightly belated sabbatical for me.
>
> The Fiji maintenance will be in good hands, as my good friend and
> colleague Curtis Rueden agreed to step in for me; His unquestioned
> integrity and skill will undoubtedly keep this project running very
> smoothly.
>
> Here's to keeping the community spirit alive!
> Johannes
>
> --
> ImageJ mailing list: http://imagej.nih.gov/ij/list.html

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