perio1

Q: How to open Carestream CD Direct XRay Images on your Mac; open INDEX.HTM in your browser

Dicom X-ray images on Windows formatted discs can be opened on your mac. Open the disc; then open the index.htm file in your browser.

******mac.com

 

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Mac Pro (Late 2013), OS X Mavericks (10.9.5), null

Posted on Feb 17, 2016 4:33 PM

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Q: How to open Carestream CD Direct XRay Images on your Mac; open INDEX.HTM in your browser

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  • Helpful answers

  • by BobTheFisherman,Helpful

    BobTheFisherman BobTheFisherman Feb 19, 2016 7:29 AM in response to perio1
    Level 6 (15,741 points)
    Feb 19, 2016 7:29 AM in response to perio1

    .htm files are agnostic with respect to operating system. An htm file can be opened by any browser or text editor regardless of operating system.

  • by Templeton Peck,

    Templeton Peck Templeton Peck Feb 18, 2016 5:40 AM in response to perio1
    Level 9 (62,070 points)
    Feb 18, 2016 5:40 AM in response to perio1

    So what is the problem?  Do what it says and open the htm file in your internet browser?

  • by perio1,

    perio1 perio1 Feb 19, 2016 7:32 AM in response to Templeton Peck
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Feb 19, 2016 7:32 AM in response to Templeton Peck

    Previous posts re the opening of dicom images on Windows X-ray discs implied that it was not possible to do so.

  • by BobTheFisherman,

    BobTheFisherman BobTheFisherman Feb 19, 2016 7:59 AM in response to perio1
    Level 6 (15,741 points)
    Feb 19, 2016 7:59 AM in response to perio1

    perio1 wrote:

     

    Previous posts re the opening of dicom images on Windows X-ray discs implied that it was not possible to do so.

    You did not ask about opening images of a specific type. You asked about an index.htm file. The answer remains the same. .htm files are just text files coded to open in a browser. If there are links to images in the index.htm file then your browser will open the images when the links are clicked or the browser will open the images automatically if their location source is coded into the htm code, unless they are some unique image type not recognizable by the browser.