>Another really nice media converter I discovered recently is Macroplant's
>Adapter. It is a super easy to use front end for FFMPEG and VLC.
>
>Regards,
>Curtis
> On Apr 12, 2015 9:32 AM, "Michael Schmid" <
[hidden email]>
>wrote:
>
>> Hi Arie,
>>
>> some alternative ways for converting:
>>
>> - Use FFMPEG (free video conversion software, command-line based) to
>> convert to a format readable by ImageJ. E.g.
>> ffmpeg -i infile.avi -pix_fmt nv12 -f avi -vcodec rawvideo outfile.avi
>>
>> - The icy video importer plugin should also read the CRAM file (I have
>> never tried it, however):
>>
http://icy.bioimageanalysis.org/plugin/Video_Importer>>
>> By the way, CRAM is Microsoft Video 1, an early lossy compression.
>>
>>
>> Concerning the Quicktime file, obviously the first thing to check is
>> whether it works in Quicktime player or VLC; if it does, it might be
>>worth
>> sending it with a bug report to the Bio-Formats team.
>>
>>
>> Michael
>> _____________________________________________________________
>>
>> On Fri, April 10, 2015 21:49, Horowitz, Arie wrote:
>> > Hello,
>> > I have tried to open in ImageJ avi files generated by the PerkinElmer
>> > UltraVox spinning disk confocal microscope software. The response is
>>an
>> > error message: Unsupported compression: 4d415234 ŒCRAM¹
>> >
>> > Based on a suggestion on the ImageJ website, I opened the file with
>> > QuickTime and saved it as a mov file. When I tried to open that file
>>with
>> > ImageJ, the Bio-Formats Import Options menu opened up. I clicked open
>> > without changing the default settings, but simply nothing happens or
>> > appears on the screen. I have repeated this after selecting <use
>>virtual
>> > stack> and/or <open all series> (intelligent (?) guesses) but nothing
>> > happened again.
>> >
>> > I would appreciate your advice.
>> >
>> > Thank you,
>> > Arie
>>
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http://imagej.nih.gov/ij/list.html>>
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