Jeff Prothero
Howdy! For most of this decade, I was bosun tight and midshipmite
and crew of the captain's gig at
the
Biological Structure Dept's graphics lab
at the
University of Washington,
which does things like
The Digital Anatomist. Now I'm at
Activerse, the people
browser people.
Here's a screen dump
of one of my Biostr programs (Morpho, running under Skandha4,
my programmable 3-D visualization toolkit)
being used to trace outlines of the male NLM Visible
Human Project subject, a guy killed by Texas. I think
I'll have a T-bone steak for dinner, yupyup.
Here's another screen dump of one of my
Biostr programs (Xmri, also running under Skandha4), this time
illustrating visualization of a 3-D dataset by displaying orthogonal
slices through the data. The data happens to be an MRI scan of my
brain, so you may consider the image to be a self-portrait. Don't you
think MRI scans display more of the real person than just a
traditional photo of the skin? grin
Here's a screen
dump of xmri configured to do mapping of
language sites, with an intra-operative photo
at top and an MRI-derived computer reconstruction
at bottom.
(Both the above look better at 1280x1024 pixels and
in 24-bit color.)
If you can display QuickTime animations,
here is a short (1Meg)
zoom through a human (not mine) brainstem,
generated by another of my programs (Skandha3).
I have a
hotlist of
hundreds of interesting URLs,
and maintain a set of WWWeb docs
on
software at the Biostr
graphics lab.
In my copious spare time,
I'm writing Muq, merely the most advanced
multiuser network server toolkit in human history.
Now and then, I recieve
Utterly Mysterious Email.