Difference between revisions of "Cell Phone SDK"

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'''All of the following images may be used with proper credit given. If no credit is stated below the image, the image is in the public domain.'''
 
'''All of the following images may be used with proper credit given. If no credit is stated below the image, the image is in the public domain.'''
  
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=== Phones ===
 
<gallery caption="Example Phones" perrow=5>
 
<gallery caption="Example Phones" perrow=5>
 
Image:treo.jpg|Palm Treo 800w
 
Image:treo.jpg|Palm Treo 800w
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</gallery>
 
</gallery>
  
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=== Probes ===
 
<gallery caption="Example Probes" perrow=5>
 
<gallery caption="Example Probes" perrow=5>
 
Image:GP.jpg|GP 5.0 MHz
 
Image:GP.jpg|GP 5.0 MHz
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</gallery>
 
</gallery>
  
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=== Applications ===
 
<gallery caption="Example Applications"  perrow=5>
 
<gallery caption="Example Applications"  perrow=5>
 
Image:Carotid.jpg|Portable, cell phone-based imaging
 
Image:Carotid.jpg|Portable, cell phone-based imaging
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</gallery>
 
</gallery>
  
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=== Fetal Images===
 
<gallery caption="Fetal Imaging" perrow=5>
 
<gallery caption="Fetal Imaging" perrow=5>
 
Image:22weekSpine.jpg|View of spine at 22 weeks
 
Image:22weekSpine.jpg|View of spine at 22 weeks
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</gallery>
 
</gallery>
  
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=== Miscellaneous ===
 
<gallery caption="Miscellaneous" perrow=5>
 
<gallery caption="Miscellaneous" perrow=5>
 
Image:Yunus.jpg|Demonstrating the cell phone ultrasound system to Nobel Laureate Dr. Mohammad Yunus
 
Image:Yunus.jpg|Demonstrating the cell phone ultrasound system to Nobel Laureate Dr. Mohammad Yunus

Revision as of 03:14, 11 October 2009

The World's First Ultrasound Machine Based on a Cell Phone

2a.jpg
Working under a Microsoft Research grant, Cell Phone as a Platform for Healthcare, we modified commercially available USB ultrasound probes to work with a smart phone and developed the SDK presented, here. Microsoft Research has awarded us a second grant to begin some field trials with DMD patients at Washington University in St. Louis School of Medicine.
  • First fetal images taken at Washington University in St. Louis Medical School: Fetal Images
  • The SDK has been released.

SDK Release

Version 2.51 has been released to the public. Source code is now available. It is released under a BSD-style license by Washington University in St. Louis.

An installer for the binary is also available and must be installed before working with the source code; this is to properly install the drivers and resources referenced by the application.

For help/discussion of this code, please use the help forum on the SourceForge.net project page.

The source may be accessed via SVN as documented here. Using SVN on a Windows machine is easy and we suggest downloading TortoiseSVN for your platform if you don't already use SVN via some other method.

  • MobileUS on SourceForge.net
  • Binary installer will install MobileUS on your Windows Mobile 6.1 or higher smartphone. It also includes several sample cine files so you can load them and see what they system can do. This will run on any Windows Mobile 6.1 phone, even if it does not have a USB host port.

In the News

Blogs

Videos

Tutorials

As some demo units are now in the field, here are two videos that are short tutorials on the phone/probe/software (V2.4x) combination. Sorry about the poor quality video, but I think they are still useful. I'll redo these with a better camera in a bit.

Images

All of the following images may be used with proper credit given. If no credit is stated below the image, the image is in the public domain.

Phones

Probes

Applications

Fetal Images

Miscellaneous