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Actually, imosflm works very nicely indeed on windows, and needs no 
third-party package.  (Unless you consider ccp4 "third-party" as opposed 
to essential.)

phx.


On 23/03/2010 19:38, James Holton wrote:
> I have been reminded that the front page of ADXV's website does not 
> have a link to the "windows version" which requires cygwin, but there 
> is a binary here:
> http://www.scripps.edu/~arvai/adxv/adxv_1.9.6/adxv.cygwin.gz
>
> You will need cygwin installed for that to work.  Good news is the 
> latest versions of NX client and cygwin no longer fight over the 
> cygwin.dll and you can have them both working happily on a Windows 
> system.
>
>
>
> There is also BDXV: an open-source viewer for ADSC-style *.img files 
> being developed by the BSCB here at ALS:
>
> http://bcsb.als.lbl.gov/wiki/index.php/BDXV
>
> You will need GTK installed for this to work.
>
>
>
> 'Fraid I don't know any viewers that don't require a third-party 
> package on Windows.  Unless, of course, you don't mind loading *.img 
> files into your favorite viewer as "raw".  Generally, there is a 
> 512-byte header to *.img files, followed by 2-byte integers 
> representing the intensity data (that you may need to byte-swap).
>
>
> -James Holton
> MAD Scientist
>
>
> James Holton wrote:
>> Although the extension *.img is used by more than one detector 
>> manufacturer, you are probably looking at data from an ADSC Inc 
>> detector?  Andy Arvai's "adxv" is a popular viewer for this format:
>>
>> http://www.scripps.edu/~arvai/adxv.html
>>
>> Run it with the option "-nopixmap" if you are using it inside an NX 
>> client.
>>
>>
>> -James Holton
>> MAD Scientist
>>
>>
>> Paul Lindblom wrote:
>>> Hi everybody,
>>>
>>> does anybody know a program to display x-ray (.img) data images in 
>>> windows?
>>>
>>> Thanks,
>>>
>>> P.