Up Close With Biodigital’s 3D Human Simulator [TCTV]:
If you missed the Bodies exhibition at your local science center, you may be in luck. Rather than see some hapless Chinese prisoners dissected and put on display, you can now view the human body in 3D using any browser. You can see almost all the systems, nerves, and organs as well as simulate the effects of various diseases including cancer and heart trouble. Ain’t the future wonderful?
The product, created by imaging company Biodigital, launched three weeks ago and we sat down with Frank Sculli and John Qualter to get a tour. You can check out the digital human here.
The product is free to use and replaces the dusty old anatomy books and charts that physicians and therapists have been using for centuries. For example, a masseuse can use the product to show which muscles he is about to attack and doctors can demonstrate techniques and pinpoint problems while patients watch. Folks who want to create custom content will pay to upgrade.
The next step, said the founders, will be to add custom body data to the images, creating images that merge MRI data and 3D rendering. For example, a cancer patient’s progress can be rendered on the body, allowing the patient and the doctor to understand the problem more clearly.
Frank and John gave us a brief demo but you can try it yourself. Who knows? You just might learn what the uvula does.
Project Page
Wednesday, April 25, 2012
Map SkyDrive, Dropbox, Google Drive To Drive Letters In Windows
Map SkyDrive, Dropbox, Google Drive To Drive Letters In Windows:
If you look around in the cloud file hosting and synchronization, you will notice that things are heating up with new contenders like Cubby or Google Drive joining the market, and existing services like SkyDrive or Dropbox adding new features. Services share features, like a synchronization software that users can run on their computer systems to sync their files with the cloud, or Gigabytes of free storage that users get when they sign up.
But services differ a lot beyond this point. This includes compatibility with operating systems and mobile devices, as well as functionality of those clients and web services.This includes the free amount of storage that users get when they sign up, upgrade costs or features that the clients and web services offer to their users.
Most cloud hosting and synchronization services use a root folder on the system that is automatically synchronized with the cloud. Some, like Cubby, offer more flexibility in this regard, as they allow users to pick any folder on the system for syncing with the cloud, or direct synchronization with another computer or device.
Windows users who’d like to improve the accessibility of those folders on their system can assign drive letters to folders to do just that. This basically maps the root folder of the file hosting service with a drive letter on the system, which reduces the file path and makes the files more accessible as a result.
Mapping folders to drives
One of the most comfortable options to map folders to drive letters is a program like Visual Subst (see our previous Visual Subst review here). While you can use the subst command for that as well, you’d have to run the command every time you’d want the folder to become available as a drive letter. You could write your own batch file for that and run it automatically on system startup, or use Visual Subst which provides you with that option and an easier to use graphical user interface.
You see an interface that looks similar to the one below. All you need to do now is to select a drive letter from the pulldown menu in the lower half of the screen, and click on the folder icon above the close button to select a local folder that you want to map to it.
A click on the plus icon adds the selection to the program window, listing the virtual drive letter and the selected folder that is mapped to it. Open Windows Explorer to test the new setup right away. If you have made an error, delete the mapping again and start anew until you get it right. You can map multiple folders to drive letters, which can be useful if you are using more than one synchronization service, or want specific folders accessible as separate drive letters.
Check the apply virtual drives on Windows startup option if you want to make the option permanent.
Alternatives to Visual Subst are Virtual Driver and XSubst
If you look around in the cloud file hosting and synchronization, you will notice that things are heating up with new contenders like Cubby or Google Drive joining the market, and existing services like SkyDrive or Dropbox adding new features. Services share features, like a synchronization software that users can run on their computer systems to sync their files with the cloud, or Gigabytes of free storage that users get when they sign up.
But services differ a lot beyond this point. This includes compatibility with operating systems and mobile devices, as well as functionality of those clients and web services.This includes the free amount of storage that users get when they sign up, upgrade costs or features that the clients and web services offer to their users.
Most cloud hosting and synchronization services use a root folder on the system that is automatically synchronized with the cloud. Some, like Cubby, offer more flexibility in this regard, as they allow users to pick any folder on the system for syncing with the cloud, or direct synchronization with another computer or device.
Windows users who’d like to improve the accessibility of those folders on their system can assign drive letters to folders to do just that. This basically maps the root folder of the file hosting service with a drive letter on the system, which reduces the file path and makes the files more accessible as a result.
Mapping folders to drives
One of the most comfortable options to map folders to drive letters is a program like Visual Subst (see our previous Visual Subst review here). While you can use the subst command for that as well, you’d have to run the command every time you’d want the folder to become available as a drive letter. You could write your own batch file for that and run it automatically on system startup, or use Visual Subst which provides you with that option and an easier to use graphical user interface.
You see an interface that looks similar to the one below. All you need to do now is to select a drive letter from the pulldown menu in the lower half of the screen, and click on the folder icon above the close button to select a local folder that you want to map to it.
A click on the plus icon adds the selection to the program window, listing the virtual drive letter and the selected folder that is mapped to it. Open Windows Explorer to test the new setup right away. If you have made an error, delete the mapping again and start anew until you get it right. You can map multiple folders to drive letters, which can be useful if you are using more than one synchronization service, or want specific folders accessible as separate drive letters.
Check the apply virtual drives on Windows startup option if you want to make the option permanent.
Alternatives to Visual Subst are Virtual Driver and XSubst
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