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iPod, iChat Help Radiologists Manage Medical Images

by , 5:10 PM EST, February 7th, 2005

Searching for a way to sidestep the $100,000-plus price of workstations needed to view high-resolution images that require 3D rendering, radiologists at the University of California, Los Angeles turned to Apple technology for the solution.

In nine months, UCLA's Dr. Osman Ratib and Dr. Antoine Rosset developed OsiriX, an open-source application that allows radiologists to teleconference with images on a Mac using iChat. The platform boasts similar functionality to the six-figure workstations but at a fraction of the cost, CNET News.com reported.

Dr. Ratib, a strong advocate of open-source development, said they built the software using many read-made components, adding the environment and interface themselves.

In an interesting twist, after Apple's release of the iPod photo the software was modified to support the digital device, giving doctors an easy means to store the large images while also providing basic viewing on the go.

The response thus far has been tremendous. "Before we'd showed it in any meeting, we had hundreds, and very soon thousands, of users," Dr. Ratib said. "We were that close to having Steve Jobs presenting it as a feature in the San Francisco keynote."

More information can be found on the OsiriX page as well as December 2004 story from the Radiological Society of North America.

Observer Comments

Show: Subjects Only | Full Comments
Close Name:kenaustus Posts: 601 Joined: 27 Jun 2003
Subject: Apple's Medical Division?

I think that now is a good time for Apple to look around at what is going on in the Mac world and to set up teams (or Divisions) to provide support for these areas. Medicine has a huge potential, as does super-computing, and Apple's potential is increased if there are teams in place, ready to go.

Close Name:Mace Posts: 9169 Joined: 07 Aug 2003
Subject: Re: Apple's Medical Division?

Quote
kenaustus wrote:
I think that now is a good time for Apple to look around at what is going on in the Mac world and to set up teams (or Divisions) to provide support for these areas. Medicine has a huge potential, as does super-computing, and Apple's potential is increased if there are teams in place, ready to go.
Agree. Somehow SJ don't seem to put much priority on enterprise. He seems more concerned with creative professionals, consumers and telcos. Apple is missing a lot of opportunities.

Close Name:gslusher Posts: 2051 Joined: 13 Nov 2002
Subject: Re: Apple's Medical Division?

Quote
Mace wrote:
[Agree. Somehow SJ don't seem to put much priority on enterprise. He seems more concerned with creative professionals, consumers and telcos. Apple is missing a lot of opportunities.


Absolutely! Besides games, the two major software categories that are nearly non-existant on Macs are general enterprise software for medium-sized businesses and institutions (human resources, logistics, enterprise accounting, inventory control, quality control, sales management, etc.) and vertical market software, specialized software to support a particular business or industry. The doctors' software above is a good example of vertical market software. Others would be auto body shop cost estimation, construction cost estimation & project management, rental real estate management, etc. I'm not talking about high-end tools for big companies (e.g., aerospace CAD/CAM systems) but tools that could be sold to literally thousands of businesses. Some of the creative industries are already well-served by Mac software--audio & video recording, editing, and production; graphic design & printing; even creative writing (scriptwriting, novels, etc., through "non-linear" word processors capable of output in appropriate formats).

One group that seemed to take to the Mac early on was law firms. They were early users of networks and file servers among smaller businesses, where a mainframe was out of the question. (Early laser printers also helped: any business whose output is printed documents will gain a lot from high-speed, high-resolution printers. A friend was an independent computer consultant in Southern California. Much of her business was with law firms running Mac-based networks--in the early '90s! I went with her on an emergency repair visit to a law firm in 1993. One of their *PCs* had gone belly-up when they shifted office equipment around. Every other computer in the office was a Mac. They used the PC for accounting, as they couldn't find a good Mac-based accounting program at the time.

I think that Apple should agressively support development of enterprise and vertical market software. Grants to innovative developers would be a major first step.

Close Name:Mace Posts: 9169 Joined: 07 Aug 2003
Subject:

There are two problems then. Apple is not in good financial health and internally, no one is well verse with enterprise. Now, Apple is very strong financially and there has one guy, Tim Cook, who know a bit about enterprise.

What Apple needs to do is to set up an enterprise division to tackle this market. I vaguely recall reading that Apple had set up a small enterprise sale team but that is not enough. Apple needs something like the Retail division for the enterprise. Let's hope Apple will get into this soon.

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