
However, rest assured I will be putting it to the test as I have a plethora (can you say “plethora”?) of discs w X-rays, CT’s. However, I no longer have to worry about buying OsiriX, which I wouldn’t do anyways bc when you’re living on an extremely limited fixed income, such niceties become even more extremely difficult to justify even a penny to it,Īnyways it does for the most part what it says it does & I’m sure most of the quirks I encountered were due to my lack of experience w the app. I am looking for something similar to the 3D MPR tool that you. I found Onis Viewer, this app will do the job but it is not very user friendly. I’m giving it 4 stars bc it’s still got some quirks. I am sure OsiriX can do this, but I don't have a Mac. Finally, OsiriX Lite contains image overlays or watermarks that read 'not for medical usage,' which can be annoying or even prohibitive when you view or share your images. Both OsiriX Lite and Horos have most of the same functions as OsiriX itself with the following limitations. I decided to look in the app store & voila, this beautiful little app which not only worked great (so far) but it’s entirely free to boot! To make that choice easier, we’ve included the comparison table below. Recently I had more X-rays & decided to try looking at them after the VA gave me a disc. They had one you could buy but my experience w the free one was so poor that there was no way I was going to buy it. One can use it for measurements as well as for annotations, for displaying of.

Then I was living in the woods for 4 yrs (long story, another adventure) & when I finally got to a place where I could use my old G4 the app was bad. Years ago (like 10 maybe? I’m blessed w ADHD so I have absolutely no concept of time) I had downloaded that OsiriX when it was free & was viewing all my MRI’s, etc.
