Download Page
You can download the latest version of NIH Image (1.62) from the NIH Image FTP site,
rsbweb.nih.gov, or by clicking on the following links.
It can also be downloaded from mirror sites in
Sweden and the
UK. See the
release notes for a list of the new features and bug fixes.
Note that NIH Image only runs on the Macintosh.
Windows, Linux, Unix, OS-2 and Mac users can use ImageJ, which is
similar to NIH Image.
- nih-image163_ppc.hqx
(693K) is a version of the NIH Image that is compatible with Mac OS 9.2.2 and with
the Classic environment of OS X 10.2.
- nih-image162_fat.hqx
(1046K) is a version of the NIH Image 1.62 application that runs on both 68K and PowerPC Macs.
- nih-image161_docs.hqx
(350K) is the NIH Image documentation in Microsoft Word 5.1 format. Includes "NIH Image 1.61 Manual",
"Inside NIH Image" and "NIH Image Engineering".
- nih-image163_src.hqx
(577K) is the source code for NIH Image V1.63. Requires the Metrowerks
CodeWarrior Pro 2 or 3 development system.
- The contrib
directory on rsbweb contains programs, images and macros contributed by users of NIH Image.
- The demos
directory contains demonstration versions of commercial Macintosh image processing and analysis programs.
- The documents
directory contains miscellaneous NIH Image related documents.
- The images
directory contains example grayscale and 8-bit color images in
TIFF and PICT format.
- The nih-image_spin-offs
directory contains programs derived from NIH Image.
- The macros
directory contains the macros that are distributed with NIH Image.
- The plug-ins
directory contains Photoshop compatible plug-ins known to
work with NIH Image.
- The programs
directory contains miscellaneous programs and utilities that
are potentially useful in conjunction with NIH Image.
- The stacks
directory contains example NIH Image "stacks" (animation
sequences and 3D images).
- The source
directory contains the NIH Image 1.63 Pascal source in plain text format.
- The user-macros
directory contains user contributed NIH Image macros. The
readme
file describes some of the macros.
[NIH Image Home Page]