When an image capturing apparatus connected to a LAN, which is connectable a plurality of terminals, transmits image data obtained by reading an image on an original to a desired terminal on the LAN, the read image is confirmed by, e.g., previewing the image using a display device placed in the vicinity of the image capturing apparatus, and is then transmitted to an actual destination. With this control, an image of a desired format can be easily transmitted even from an image capturing apparatus having no satisfactory image display function to a desired destination.
The scanner 10 having a function as a data transmission device generates a reduced image 202 from the original image data obtained by scanning a document, prepares an e-mail 200 that contains the reduced image 202, which is linked to the original image data file stored in a specified storage area, and transmits the e-mail 200 to a specified destination.
The present invention is directed to a system and method for scannable executable design. In a first aspect of the present invention, a system and method for developing an executable includes scanning an image and identifying a representation of a user interface element included in the scanned image. An executable is then formatted to include a user interface element corresponding to the identified representation of the user interface element. In a second aspect of the present invention, a representation of a user interface element suitable for scanning includes an object capable of being positioned on a medium, the object representing the user interface element. The object is capable of being identified as corresponding to the user interface element so that when the object is scanned, a executable is formatted to include the user interface element corresponding to the identified representation of the user interface element.
A method and apparatus are disclosed for constructing a virtual microscope slide comprised of digitally scanned images from a microscope specimen. The digitally scanned images are arranged in a tiled format convenient for viewing without a microscope, and for transferring the tiled images for viewing by another at a remote location. Several original microscope views at a low magnification are digitized and stored as digitized images coherently seamed together to provide an overall virtual, macro image of the specimen at a lower resolution. Several original microscope views at higher magnifications are digitized and stored as digitized images coherently seamed together to provide virtual micro images at higher resolution. A data structure is formed with these virtual macro and micro digitized images along with their mapping coordinates. Preferably, a generic viewing program is also provided in the data structure that allows remote users to manipulate and interpret the tiled images on the user's monitor. Also, the data structure is formed with significantly compressed data so as to be transmitted over low bandwidth channels, such as the Internet, without loss of resolution that would interfere with the analysis at a remotely-located pathologist receiving the data structure over the Internet. The preferred interactive program allows the pathologist to scroll and view neighboring image areas of interest. A marker on the macro image indicates to the user the location of the micro image and assists the user in selecting areas from the macro image to be viewed at higher resolution and magnification.