Showing posts with label 3d scanner manufacturers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 3d scanner manufacturers. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

my Windows Experience Index Dropped?

Q. I have an Alienware m11x...I updated some drivers from the manufacturer's website and made sure they were the latest ones. My index score for Gaming Graphics (3D business and gaming graphics performance) just dropped from 6.5 to 4.4! What the hell happened??


Answer
drivers are communication packages that "speak" to the cpu and relevant hardware/software using it, in old drivers you are given specific settings for that one device, however new drivers dont have the same settings and run on new technology, you have downloaded the latest drivers, BUT now other drivers that matched your old drivers need to be updated so they can tie with each other again.

your old drivers had a better match with all your older drivers and settings, because you have updated them, the rest need updated aswel. new drivers dont like old drivers, especially in windows vista and windows 7. as these operating systems use a unique format to register drivers compared to xp.

download uniblue driver scanner (google it) and install and scan your system, takes 15 seconds, this will check ALL your drivers and download new drivers for you, but you choose what ones to install.

hope this helps.

How do I know which graphics card my laptop is using for which things?




Tom


My laptop has an intel HD graphics card onboard and also an nvidia graphics card. I have both enabled but when programs search for what graphics card I am using, the intel one shows up. Is the computer still using the nvidia card?
They're both internal and came with the laptop. Would the computer just automatically relegate desktop activities to the intel HD card and things like gaming to the nvidia card?
The only setting I can find in the power options for graphics say Intel(R) Graphics Settings - Intel(R) Graphics Power Plan - On Battery: Maximum Performance, Plugged in: Maximum Performance. I can't find a setting for the Nvidia card.



Answer
Try this scanner at Nvidia.
You need to install the driver so you can access the control panel.
http://www.nvidia.com/object/performance_group.html

If it is installed you will see a green icon by the clock.
Or right click the desktop and see if Nvidia Control panel is there.

You can also get the driver from your laptop manufacturer.
Go the the main page and click the Support link.

When you open the Nvidia Control Panel click on Manage 3D Settings and add your games and applications ".exe" name to the list. Then the Nvidia will be used when you run it.




Powered by Yahoo! Answers

Saturday, April 26, 2014

Please name companies that makes Cone Beam CT Scanning Equipment?




Mr. USA


I am looking for a CBCT equipment that would allow me to create 3D images from the scans. I need an integrated CBCT and 3D facility. I also need a handheld CT scanner. Prices? List of manufacturers, too. Thank you, kindly.


Answer
You can view and dowload a presentation of CBCT manufacturers at Scribd. A web link to each vendor's website is included.
http://www.scribd.com/doc/14048324/Cone-Beam-CBCT-Scanners-April-2009

A growing directory of customers for CBCT scanners is located here:
http://knol.google.com/k/murry-shohat/cbct-x-ray-services-directory/2srzofgvr8kjr/12#

Where can I find an aluminum-framed PC?

Q. I've been searching Google for quite awhile, and I can't seem to find any PCs that have an aluminum frame. I want it to be similar in style to the new aluminum macbook pro, but I don't want it to be a macbook.
I'm looking for a moderately powerful laptop.


Answer
You can get it custom made if you just buy a pc, take off the plastic frame, scan it in a 3D scanner, and send it to an aluminum manufacturer and have them build it for you.




Powered by Yahoo! Answers

Monday, April 14, 2014

Where can I find an aluminum-framed PC?




wizkidweb


I've been searching Google for quite awhile, and I can't seem to find any PCs that have an aluminum frame. I want it to be similar in style to the new aluminum macbook pro, but I don't want it to be a macbook.
I'm looking for a moderately powerful laptop.



Answer
You can get it custom made if you just buy a pc, take off the plastic frame, scan it in a 3D scanner, and send it to an aluminum manufacturer and have them build it for you.

Any Dr. prepared to give me "scanner" images of human LIMBS?




just "JR"


I am doing some preliminary research on "Morphology Replication of Human Limbs Prosthesis".
In (very) short:
- A human lost an arm
- I scan the remaining one
- I make a mirror image of it.
- I build the missing bones in titanium alloy (technically modified)
- I build the muscle structure using nanotube carbon fibres
- I build the skin tissue using DNA "spray"...
... more ...
- A surgeon "implants" the prothesis.
Already a 20 years dream.
Accepted as a PhD researcher with Coimbra University. Need concrete preliminary results to confirm research project.

Current problems:
- Get scanned image of human "arm" (from mid-humerus to finger tips), taken from standard medical scanners to convert these images into 3D models, where the exact sketelton can be extracted in 3D.
- Get existing programs that do the transformation (none found yet: medical scanners manufacturers are not prepared to share data)
- I can write and develop the program to do the conversion.
- Drs. use "Patient confidentiality" to refuse my request.
- I offer "my arm" for scanning, but I have to pay for it (tooooo much $)
Offers?
Solutions?
Images?
Thanks
(I'll put my research status on my site (http://www.web2coders.com/research - in a day or two, if I receive any answer)



Answer
This sounds pretty futuristic, and it will be hard to obtain images from "real" patients, because human subjects are (luckily) very protected for medical research. You would not want your medical scans and information to end up in the wrong hands either, for sure.

But I would assume that your project could work if you had a "general", average arm, wouldn't it?
Here is a website that seems to provide 3-D medical images. I am not a member of this site, and you'd have to pay for the images, but it would be a start.

http://www.medicalrf.com/
http://www.3d4medical.com/

Then, Stanford University in California does work on 3D medical images. You could try to contact them. Make sure to stress that you want de-identified images, so without ANY patient data. That might help you get what you need.
http://3dradiology.stanford.edu/

Good luck! I am not sure if this would work with the current technology. The " DNA spray" to make skin seems too futuristic for current techniques. Maybe your arm does not really need skin, most patients would already be happy with something that they can move. Have you thought about how a patient would move that artificial arm? I would guess that nerves, and the connection to the brain, are the most difficult step.




Powered by Yahoo! Answers

Saturday, March 15, 2014

what is photoshop?




*~KoolChic


i want to know what it is and i actually wi cant to try it if i can find out how it works


Answer
here you go!!!

Adobe Photoshop, or simply Photoshop, is a graphics editor developed and published by Adobe Systems. It is the current market leader for commercial bitmap and image manipulation, and is the flagship product of Adobe Systems. It has been described as "an industry standard for graphics professionals."[1] Although originally designed to edit images for paper-based printing, Photoshop can also be used for a wide range of other professional and amateur purposes.

The current (10th) iteration of the program was released on April 16, 2007 and is marketed as "Photoshop CS3." "CS" reflects its integration with other Creative Suite products, and the number "3" represents it as the third version released since Adobe re-branded their products under the CS umbrella. Photoshop CS3 features additions such as the ability to apply non-destructive filters, and new selection tools named Quick Selection and Refine Edge that make selection more streamlined. On April 30th, Adobe released Photoshop CS3 Extended, which includes all the same features of Adobe Photoshop CS3 plus capabilities for scientific imaging, 3D, plus high end film and video users

Development

Early history
In 1987, Thomas Knoll, then a PhD student at the University of Michigan, began writing a program on his Macintosh Plus to display grayscale images on a monochrome display. This program, called Display, caught the attention of his brother John Knoll, an Industrial Light & Magic employee, who recommended Thomas turn it into a full-fledged image editing program. Thomas took a six month break from his studies in 1988 to collaborate with his brother on the program, which had been renamed ImagePro.[2] In 1988, Thomas renamed his program Photoshop and worked out a short-term deal with scanner manufacturer Barneyscan to distribute copies of the program (under the name Barneyscan XP) with their scanners.[3]

During this time, John traveled to Silicon Valley and gave a demonstration of the program to engineers at Apple Computer Inc. and Russell Brown, art director at Adobe. Both showings were successful, and Adobe decided to purchase the license to distribute in September 1988.[2] While John worked on plug-ins in California, Thomas remained in Ann Arbor writing out program code. Photoshop 1.0 was released in 1990 for Macintosh exclusively, and fit on one 1.44 MB floppy disk.[4]


Adobe releases
Further information: Adobe Photoshop release history

Photoshop CS in WindowsContinual revisions were made to the program and new versions were released in the following years. Version 2.0 became compatible with Windows in November 1992, and one year later it was ported to the SGI IRIX and Sun Solaris platforms. In September 1994, version 3.0 was released, which introduced layers and tabbed palettes. This version's logo also introduced the 'eye' motif seen until version 8.0 of the program.[5] In February 2003, the program shipped with the Camera RAW 1.x plug-in, which allowed the user to import RAW formats from different digital cameras directly into Photoshop.[6]

In October 2003, the program was renamed Adobe Photoshop CS. The name uses the abbreviation CS for products in Adobe Creative Suite. The logo focused around a feather, which was also used in 9.0.[5] The 10th version, Photoshop CS3 was released on April 16, 2007, with an icon modeled after periodic table elements, matching the new icons of other Creative Suite products.


Features

CS3

Smart Layers, nondestructive filter applicationCS3 is marketed with three main components of improvement over previous versions: "Work more productively, Edit with unrivaled power, and Composite with breakthrough tools."[7] New features propagating productivity include streamlined interface, improved Camera Raw, better control over print options, enhanced PDF support, and better management with Adobe Bridge. Editing tools new to CS3 are the Clone Source palette and nondestructive Smart Filters, and other features such as the Channel Mixer and Vanishing Point are enhanced. Compositing is assisted with Photoshop's new Quick Selection and Refine Edge tools, and improved Photomerge technology.[7]

CS3 Extended contains all features of CS3 plus tools for editing and importing some 3D graphics file formats, enhancing video, and comprehensive image analysis tools, utilizing MATLAB integration and DICOM file support.[8]

The logo is composed of white letters 'Ps' on a gradient blue square.


General
Photoshop has strong ties with other Adobe software for media editing, animation and authoring. Files in Photoshop's native format, .PSD, can be exported to and from Adobe ImageReady, Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Premiere Pro, After Effects and Adobe Encore DVD to make professional standard DVDs, provide non-linear editing and special effects services such as backgrounds, textures and so on for television, film and the Web. For example, Photoshop CS broadly supports making menus and buttons for DVDs. For .PSD files exported as a menu or button, it only needs to have layers, nested in layer sets with a cuing format and Adobe Encore DVD reads them as buttons or menus.

Photoshop can utilize the color models RGB, lab, CMYK, grayscale, bitmap, and duotone. Photoshop has the ability to read and write Raster and Vector image formats such as: .EPS, .PNG, .GIF, .JPEG, Fireworks, etc. It also has several native file formats:

The .PSD (Photoshop Document) format stores an image with support for most imaging options available in Photoshop. These include layers with masks, color spaces, ICC profiles, transparency, text, alpha channels & spot colors, Clipping paths, and duotone settings. This is in contrast to many other file formats (e.g. .EPS or .GIF) that restrict content to provide streamlined, predicatable functionality. Photoshop's popularity means that the .PSD format is widely used, and it is supported to some extent by most competing software.
The .PSB (Photoshop Big) format is a newer version of .PSD designed for files over 2 gigabytes.
The .PDD (PhotoDeluxe Document) format is a version of .PSD that only supports the features found in the discontinued PhotoDeluxe software.
While Photoshop is the industry standard image editing program for professional raster graphics, its relatively high suggested retail price has led to a number of competing graphics tools being made available at lower prices for the amateur market. To compete in this market, and to counter unusually high rates of piracy of their high end products, Adobe introduced Photoshop Elements, a version of Photoshop with many professional features removed. This is aimed firmly at the general consumer market as it is less desirable for prepress work.


Trademark
Adobe discourages use of their trademarks as a verb, as in "that picture was photoshopped". As with all trademarks, their product names and elements are part of licensing and graphic identity programs, and any attempt to undermine their position is expressly prohibited.[9]

my Windows Experience Index Dropped?

Q. I have an Alienware m11x...I updated some drivers from the manufacturer's website and made sure they were the latest ones. My index score for Gaming Graphics (3D business and gaming graphics performance) just dropped from 6.5 to 4.4! What the hell happened??


Answer
drivers are communication packages that "speak" to the cpu and relevant hardware/software using it, in old drivers you are given specific settings for that one device, however new drivers dont have the same settings and run on new technology, you have downloaded the latest drivers, BUT now other drivers that matched your old drivers need to be updated so they can tie with each other again.

your old drivers had a better match with all your older drivers and settings, because you have updated them, the rest need updated aswel. new drivers dont like old drivers, especially in windows vista and windows 7. as these operating systems use a unique format to register drivers compared to xp.

download uniblue driver scanner (google it) and install and scan your system, takes 15 seconds, this will check ALL your drivers and download new drivers for you, but you choose what ones to install.

hope this helps.




Powered by Yahoo! Answers

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Any Dr. prepared to give me "scanner" images of human LIMBS?

3d scanner manufacturers
 on 3d laser wood in india, 3d laser wood in india Manufacturers in ...
3d scanner manufacturers image



just "JR"


Any Dr. prepared to give me "scanner" images of human LIMBS?
I am doing some preliminary research on "Morphology Replication of Human Limbs Prosthesis".
In (very) short:
- A human lost an arm
- I scan the remaining one
- I make a mirror image of it.
- I build the missing bones in titanium alloy (technically modified)
- I build the muscle structure using nanotube carbon fibres
- I build the skin tissue using DNA "spray"...
... more ...
- A surgeon "implants" the prothesis.
Already a 20 years dream.
Accepted as a PhD researcher with Coimbra University. Need concrete preliminary results to confirm research project.

Current problems:
- Get scanned image of human "arm" (from mid-humerus to finger tips), taken from standard medical scanners to convert these images into 3D models, where the exact sketelton can be extracted in 3D.
- Get existing programs that do the transformation (none found yet: medical scanners manufacturers are not prepared to share data)
- I can write and develop the program to do the conversion.
- Drs. use "Patient confidentiality" to refuse my request.
- I offer "my arm" for scanning, but I have to pay for it (tooooo much $)
Offers?
Solutions?
Images?
Thanks
(I'll put my research status on my site (http://www.web2coders.com/research - in a day or two, if I receive any answer)



Answer
You might get more response if you go visit a clinic or hospital in person.

Few of us here in "Computers & Internet" will have access to pictures of people's arms.

Can anyone tell me how easy is it to change over to linux and get drivers for printers , scanners and video di




deeva4444


Thank you all for your good advice and the links you provided for me you were all very helpful and gave me some new knowledge thanks again much apreciated


Answer
The first place is to research the hardware you have to make sure it is supported under Linux and specifically under the distribution you are interested in running. The simplest way is to get a "LiveCD" which lets you try Linux without modifying your existing operating system. While this method is slower since it works only from memory and CD, it lets you try the different distros until you find one you are comfortable with.

I highly recommend finding a book to help you learn Linux (either from a public library or purchased) since it will allow you to read along as you perform the various tasks without needing your computer to view online documents. This is especially helpful during the installation steps.

Printers from major brands (HP, Epson, etc) have good support under Linux (http://linuxprinting.org)

Scanners are hit and miss, although a new scanner is cheaper than an upgrade of Windows these days.

Just about all video cards are supported using a fallback driver (vesa.) 3d acceleration is available for major cards such as Nvidia and ATI using the proprietary drivers from those manufacturer's websites.




Powered by Yahoo! Answers

Saturday, November 30, 2013

What diffrent with Windoes Vista???

3d scanner manufacturers
 on ... 3d camera scanner products from 3d camera scanner Manufacturers,on
3d scanner manufacturers image



=]


what the diffrence between windows Vista, and xp?

which ones better?

And is xp easier to use or something?

(its going to be used on a laptop)
im basically using my laptop for word, powerpoint, internet........school stuff basically.



Answer
Windows Vista has wonderful graphic features. I love a few things - you can actually see items in your folders. If you hover the cursor over an item in your taskbar it shows a mini version of what it is (useful if you've got two things open with similar names). There is a really cool tool that does screen capture (called the snipping tool). Another cool feature is the switch between windows button - this button shows you in 3D all of the stuff you have open at a 45 degree angle so it's easy to find things when you have lots open. The higher security features are also a definite benefit.

I found it really easy to set-up and easy to use. The help menu is very informative.

My laptop came with it already installed and I've had no problems whatsoever.

If you're thinking of upgrading - read this first. Run the upgrade advisor - it will tell you exactly what you need to run all the features smoothly. In order to use all of the 3D features you need a minimum of 1 GB RAM. Here's a link to the upgrade advisor (there's also hints and tips at the bottom of the page). http://www.windowsmarketplace.com/content.aspx?ctId=390

People who have problems are those who did not run the upgrade advisor and have a number of older peripherals (printers, scanners, etc.) and other software on their computer. Manufacturer's need time to create upgrades and drivers for Vista (most software/peripherals require different drivers than XP). If you have lots of games/software etc. on your laptop you may want to wait 3 - 6 months.

Hope this helps.

my Windows Experience Index Dropped?

Q. I have an Alienware m11x...I updated some drivers from the manufacturer's website and made sure they were the latest ones. My index score for Gaming Graphics (3D business and gaming graphics performance) just dropped from 6.5 to 4.4! What the hell happened??


Answer
drivers are communication packages that "speak" to the cpu and relevant hardware/software using it, in old drivers you are given specific settings for that one device, however new drivers dont have the same settings and run on new technology, you have downloaded the latest drivers, BUT now other drivers that matched your old drivers need to be updated so they can tie with each other again.

your old drivers had a better match with all your older drivers and settings, because you have updated them, the rest need updated aswel. new drivers dont like old drivers, especially in windows vista and windows 7. as these operating systems use a unique format to register drivers compared to xp.

download uniblue driver scanner (google it) and install and scan your system, takes 15 seconds, this will check ALL your drivers and download new drivers for you, but you choose what ones to install.

hope this helps.




Powered by Yahoo! Answers

Sunday, September 15, 2013

What is an optical scanner and how does it work?

3d scanner manufacturers
 on ... , laser scanning software Manufacturers in LuLuSoSo.com - page 1
3d scanner manufacturers image



huzaifai





Answer
in computing, a scanner is a device that analyzes an image (such as a photograph, printed text, or handwriting) or an object (such as an ornament) and converts it to a digital image. Most scanners today are variations of the desktop (or flatbed) scanner The flatbed scanner is the most common in offices. Hand-held scanners, where the device is moved by hand, were briefly popular but are now not used due to the difficulty of obtaining a high-quality image. Both these types of scanners use charge-coupled device (CCD) or Contact Image Sensor (CIS) as the image sensor, whereas older drum scanners use a photomultiplier tube as the image sensor.

Another category of scanner is a rotary scanner used for high-speed document scanning. This is another kind of drum scanner, but it uses a CCD array instead of a photomultiplier.

Other types of scanners are planetary scanners, which take photographs of books and documents, and 3D scanners, for producing three-dimensional models of objects.



Scanners typically read red-green-blue color (RGB) data from the array. This data is then processed with some proprietary algorithm to correct for different exposure conditions and sent to the computer, via the device's input/output interface (usually SCSI or USB, or LPT in machines pre-dating the USB standard). Color depth varies depending on the scanning array characteristics, but is usually at least 24 bits. High quality models have 48 bits or more color depth. The other qualifying parameter for a scanner is its resolution, measured in pixels per inch (ppi), sometimes more accurately referred to as samples per inch (spi). Instead of using the scanner's true optical resolution, the only meaningful parameter, manufacturers like to refer to the interpolated resolution, which is much higher thanks to software interpolation. As of 2004, a good flatbed scanner has an optical resolution of 1600â3200 ppi, high-end flatbed scanners can scan up to 5400 ppi, and a good drum scanner has an optical resolution of 8000â14,000 ppi.

Manufacturers often claim interpolated resolutions as high as 19,200 ppi; but such numbers carry little meaningful value, because the number of possible interpolated pixels is unlimited. The higher the resolution, the larger the file. In most cases, there is a trade-off between manageable file size and level of detail. Resolutions higher than 1200dpi are overkill for colour printers and monitors.

The third important parameter for a scanner is its density range. A high density range means that the scanner is able to reproduce shadow details and brightness details in one scan.

Where can I find an aluminum-framed PC?




wizkidweb


I've been searching Google for quite awhile, and I can't seem to find any PCs that have an aluminum frame. I want it to be similar in style to the new aluminum macbook pro, but I don't want it to be a macbook.
I'm looking for a moderately powerful laptop.



Answer
You can get it custom made if you just buy a pc, take off the plastic frame, scan it in a 3D scanner, and send it to an aluminum manufacturer and have them build it for you.




Powered by Yahoo! Answers

Saturday, August 24, 2013

Any Dr. prepared to give me "scanner" images of human LIMBS?

3d scanner manufacturers
 on Scanner, 3D Scanner Products, 3D Scanner Suppliers and Manufacturers ...
3d scanner manufacturers image



just "JR"


I am doing some preliminary research on "Morphology Replication of Human Limbs Prosthesis".
In (very) short:
- A human lost an arm
- I scan the remaining one
- I make a mirror image of it.
- I build the missing bones in titanium alloy (technically modified)
- I build the muscle structure using nanotube carbon fibres
- I build the skin tissue using DNA "spray"...
... more ...
- A surgeon "implants" the prothesis.
Already a 20 years dream.
Accepted as a PhD researcher with Coimbra University. Need concrete preliminary results to confirm research project.

Current problems:
- Get scanned image of human "arm" (from mid-humerus to finger tips), taken from standard medical scanners to convert these images into 3D models, where the exact sketelton can be extracted in 3D.
- Get existing programs that do the transformation (none found yet: medical scanners manufacturers are not prepared to share data)
- I can write and develop the program to do the conversion.
- Drs. use "Patient confidentiality" to refuse my request.
- I offer "my arm" for scanning, but I have to pay for it (tooooo much $)
Offers?
Solutions?
Images?
Thanks
(I'll put my research status on my site (http://www.web2coders.com/research - in a day or two, if I receive any answer)



Answer
This sounds pretty futuristic, and it will be hard to obtain images from "real" patients, because human subjects are (luckily) very protected for medical research. You would not want your medical scans and information to end up in the wrong hands either, for sure.

But I would assume that your project could work if you had a "general", average arm, wouldn't it?
Here is a website that seems to provide 3-D medical images. I am not a member of this site, and you'd have to pay for the images, but it would be a start.

http://www.medicalrf.com/
http://www.3d4medical.com/

Then, Stanford University in California does work on 3D medical images. You could try to contact them. Make sure to stress that you want de-identified images, so without ANY patient data. That might help you get what you need.
http://3dradiology.stanford.edu/

Good luck! I am not sure if this would work with the current technology. The " DNA spray" to make skin seems too futuristic for current techniques. Maybe your arm does not really need skin, most patients would already be happy with something that they can move. Have you thought about how a patient would move that artificial arm? I would guess that nerves, and the connection to the brain, are the most difficult step.

Any Dr. prepared to give me "scanner" images of human LIMBS?




just "JR"


Any Dr. prepared to give me "scanner" images of human LIMBS?
I am doing some preliminary research on "Morphology Replication of Human Limbs Prosthesis".
In (very) short:
- A human lost an arm
- I scan the remaining one
- I make a mirror image of it.
- I build the missing bones in titanium alloy (technically modified)
- I build the muscle structure using nanotube carbon fibres
- I build the skin tissue using DNA "spray"...
... more ...
- A surgeon "implants" the prothesis.
Already a 20 years dream.
Accepted as a PhD researcher with Coimbra University. Need concrete preliminary results to confirm research project.

Current problems:
- Get scanned image of human "arm" (from mid-humerus to finger tips), taken from standard medical scanners to convert these images into 3D models, where the exact sketelton can be extracted in 3D.
- Get existing programs that do the transformation (none found yet: medical scanners manufacturers are not prepared to share data)
- I can write and develop the program to do the conversion.
- Drs. use "Patient confidentiality" to refuse my request.
- I offer "my arm" for scanning, but I have to pay for it (tooooo much $)
Offers?
Solutions?
Images?
Thanks
(I'll put my research status on my site (http://www.web2coders.com/research - in a day or two, if I receive any answer)



Answer
You might get more response if you go visit a clinic or hospital in person.

Few of us here in "Computers & Internet" will have access to pictures of people's arms.




Powered by Yahoo! Answers

Thursday, August 22, 2013

Please name companies that makes Cone Beam CT Scanning Equipment?

3d scanner manufacturers
 on applications : signs, pop-up cards, screen printing, flex circuits ...
3d scanner manufacturers image



Mr. USA


I am looking for a CBCT equipment that would allow me to create 3D images from the scans. I need an integrated CBCT and 3D facility. I also need a handheld CT scanner. Prices? List of manufacturers, too. Thank you, kindly.


Answer
You can view and dowload a presentation of CBCT manufacturers at Scribd. A web link to each vendor's website is included.
http://www.scribd.com/doc/14048324/Cone-Beam-CBCT-Scanners-April-2009

A growing directory of customers for CBCT scanners is located here:
http://knol.google.com/k/murry-shohat/cbct-x-ray-services-directory/2srzofgvr8kjr/12#

Do almost all laptops have cameras now?

Q. I was just thinking about getting a laptop and it looks to me like almost all of then have cameras now. Also could you recommend some good brands?


Answer
Just about all of the latest laptops and netbooks I've seen today have decent web cams built into them.

There are many excellent laptops and netbooks out there today. Going with a brand name computer with a good warranty and support program is important.

Do a search for "top laptop reviews" and you will find many websites with customer reviews on the latest and best laptops along with their prices.

Something to consider while shopping for a good laptop or netbook is how much can you spend? What size screen do you want? (15" to 17" are nice sizes, more efficient). Try out the keyboard if you can and make sure it's a full-sized keyboard that feels good.

Make sure you have at least 2 gigabytes of memory if your laptop has Vista running on it. Also, make sure your hard drive is at least 150 gigabytes, preferably larger. And be clear what software comes with your unit, not just trialware programs. Also, make sure your new laptop or netbook comes with a good graphics card on it.

And do make sure you like the look of your laptop or netbook. Make sure it has a nice outer-shell coating and it's something you really like. Check for things like how long your battery cell will last (hopefully between 3-6 hours) and what type of built-in security it might have. HP has some nice units with fingerprint scanners built in.

And while I think about it, jump over to QVC.com and HSN.com as each of them represent HP and ACER laptop and netbook manufacturers and sometimes you can find some great deals there, including flex payments.

Here is CNET's reviews of the Top 5 laptops: http://reviews.cnet.com/best-laptops/

PC Magazine's 2009 Best Laptop Reviews: http://www.pcmag.com/products/0,,tqs=CEFEABBCE0F3D5AF28C24FA484B268E08927E375,00.asp?action=defaultadvancedquery&cid=1565&sid=1565&gridtitle=Recent%20Product%20Reviews&googlequery=q%3d%26start%3d0%26num%3d10%26mt823%3d21234%26pr21234%3dLess%2520than%2520%242200&stpdinglp=1

If you get lost at PC Magazine, just click on their 'Review' button and then look for the laptop picture and click that.

Good luck!




Powered by Yahoo! Answers

Monday, July 29, 2013

Any Dr. prepared to give me "scanner" images of human LIMBS?

3d scanner manufacturers
 on Qubic - 3D Scanning - Konica Minolta Vivid 910 3D Laser Scanner
3d scanner manufacturers image



just "JR"


Any Dr. prepared to give me "scanner" images of human LIMBS?
I am doing some preliminary research on "Morphology Replication of Human Limbs Prosthesis".
In (very) short:
- A human lost an arm
- I scan the remaining one
- I make a mirror image of it.
- I build the missing bones in titanium alloy (technically modified)
- I build the muscle structure using nanotube carbon fibres
- I build the skin tissue using DNA "spray"...
... more ...
- A surgeon "implants" the prothesis.
Already a 20 years dream.
Accepted as a PhD researcher with Coimbra University. Need concrete preliminary results to confirm research project.

Current problems:
- Get scanned image of human "arm" (from mid-humerus to finger tips), taken from standard medical scanners to convert these images into 3D models, where the exact sketelton can be extracted in 3D.
- Get existing programs that do the transformation (none found yet: medical scanners manufacturers are not prepared to share data)
- I can write and develop the program to do the conversion.
- Drs. use "Patient confidentiality" to refuse my request.
- I offer "my arm" for scanning, but I have to pay for it (tooooo much $)
Offers?
Solutions?
Images?
Thanks
(I'll put my research status on my site (http://www.web2coders.com/research - in a day or two, if I receive any answer)



Answer
You might get more response if you go visit a clinic or hospital in person.

Few of us here in "Computers & Internet" will have access to pictures of people's arms.

Can anyone tell me how easy is it to change over to linux and get drivers for printers , scanners and video di




deeva4444


Thank you all for your good advice and the links you provided for me you were all very helpful and gave me some new knowledge thanks again much apreciated


Answer
The first place is to research the hardware you have to make sure it is supported under Linux and specifically under the distribution you are interested in running. The simplest way is to get a "LiveCD" which lets you try Linux without modifying your existing operating system. While this method is slower since it works only from memory and CD, it lets you try the different distros until you find one you are comfortable with.

I highly recommend finding a book to help you learn Linux (either from a public library or purchased) since it will allow you to read along as you perform the various tasks without needing your computer to view online documents. This is especially helpful during the installation steps.

Printers from major brands (HP, Epson, etc) have good support under Linux (http://linuxprinting.org)

Scanners are hit and miss, although a new scanner is cheaper than an upgrade of Windows these days.

Just about all video cards are supported using a fallback driver (vesa.) 3d acceleration is available for major cards such as Nvidia and ATI using the proprietary drivers from those manufacturer's websites.




Powered by Yahoo! Answers