Mercurial > hg > orthanc-book
view Sphinx/source/faq/video.rst @ 218:8bb11cd0f20f
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author | amazy |
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date | Mon, 25 Feb 2019 19:01:45 +0100 |
parents | ab80b2b3cdbd |
children | 96750e66dd87 |
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Does Orthanc support videos? ============================ The answer to this question really depends on what you mean by "support" and "video": * In the world of DICOM, a "video" can either refer to a 2D+t (aka. a "cine" sequence of individual frames) or a real video (compressed using H.264 or MPEG2). For instance, ultrasound devices would generate cine sequences, whereas recent endoscopes would generate real videos. * Depending on the context, "support" can mean "*Is Orthanc able to query/receive/transfer DICOM files?*", or "*Is Orthanc able to render/play DICOM files?*". If you "just" want to **query/receive/transfer** DICOM videos, Orthanc will work fine either with 2D+t or real videos (because Orthanc is a `Vendor Neutral Archive <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vendor_Neutral_Archive>`__). This distinction is also discussed in :ref:`another FAQ entry <supported-images>`. If you also want to **play** the videos, to the best of our knowledge, there is currently no Orthanc plugin for H.264 or MPEG2 (though such a plugin should be developed in the future). However, if your video is a 2D+t (cine) sequence, Orthanc can already display it inside a Web browser by at least 2 different means: 1. The built-in, administrative interface called :ref:`Orthanc Explorer <orthanc-explorer>` is able to display the individual frames and manually navigate between them through keyboard. 2. The official `Web viewer plugin <http://www.orthanc-server.com/static.php?page=web-viewer>`__ will allow you to use the mouse scroll wheel to display the successive frames of the video. To summarize, if your video is not encoded with MPEG2 or H264, OR if you do not need to play the video within a Web browser, Orthanc actually supports video.