Olaf Selchow |
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To join, leave or search the confocal microscopy listserv, go to: http://lists.umn.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A0=confocalmicroscopy Post images on http://www.imgur.com and include the link in your posting. ***** Dear List, dear Microscopists, Biologists, Scientists, I work as a freelance Microscopy & BioImaging Consultant in Germany and I would like to ask you for the favor to participate in a short survey on Advanced Microscopy Techniques that I have put together on google. It is about if you use FLIM, FCS, Single Molecule Imaging etc, and what you think is needed to make these technologies more accessible to a wider part of the life sciences. I aim to figure out trends and needs. The survey is divided in 4 sections and will take you about 10 to 12 minutes ======== Please find the survey following the link https://goo.gl/forms/b7J32fAgqvvBaw452 ======== The purpose of this project is to optimise my consulting input for microscopy developing companies, with the goal to improve the available hardware and make the above methods accessible to a wider user base. It is not a purely commercial project because the insights I gain will be beneficial to both, the industrial partners I work with and the academic microscopy community. This survey is targeted to microscopists, biologists, life scientists, medical doctors and microscopy-users in the life science field in general. The survey is anonymous. Be assured that no personal data will be collected. The results will not be published or used otherwise than indicated. Please fill the form only once unless you have multiple professional roles, like, for example, running a microscopy core facility and, in a different role, carrying out research as a postdoc or group leader. If you are interested in discussing results with me, you are invited to contact me at [hidden email] or via Linkedin (www.linkedin.com/in/selchow) after June 1, 2018 (It will take a while to sort the data ...) Thank you very much in advance for your time and input. With best regards, Olaf ____________________________ Dr. Olaf Selchow Microscopy & BioImaging Consulting [hidden email] +49 172 3286313 skype: olaf.selchow |
Ralf Palmisano |
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To join, leave or search the confocal microscopy listserv, go to: http://lists.umn.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A0=confocalmicroscopy Post images on http://www.imgur.com and include the link in your posting. ***** Dear Mods, correct me if I am wrong. Did we not agree to mark commercial postings as commercial? Best Ralf Am 11.04.2018 um 12:04 schrieb Olaf Selchow: > ***** > To join, leave or search the confocal microscopy listserv, go to: > http://lists.umn.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A0=confocalmicroscopy > Post images on http://www.imgur.com and include the link in your posting. > ***** > > Dear List, dear Microscopists, Biologists, Scientists, > > I work as a freelance Microscopy & BioImaging Consultant in Germany and I would like to ask you for the favor to participate in a short survey on Advanced Microscopy Techniques that I have put together on google. > > It is about if you use FLIM, FCS, Single Molecule Imaging etc, and what you think is needed to make these technologies more accessible to a wider part of the life sciences. I aim to figure out trends and needs. > > The survey is divided in 4 sections and will take you about 10 to 12 minutes > > ======== > Please find the survey following the link https://goo.gl/forms/b7J32fAgqvvBaw452 > ======== > > The purpose of this project is to optimise my consulting input for microscopy developing companies, with the goal to improve the available hardware and make the above methods accessible to a wider user base. It is not a purely commercial project because the insights I gain will be beneficial to both, the industrial partners I work with and the academic microscopy community. > This survey is targeted to microscopists, biologists, life scientists, medical doctors and microscopy-users in the life science field in general. > > The survey is anonymous. Be assured that no personal data will be collected. The results will not be published or used otherwise than indicated. Please fill the form only once unless you have multiple professional roles, like, for example, running a microscopy core facility and, in a different role, carrying out research as a postdoc or group leader. > > If you are interested in discussing results with me, you are invited to contact me at [hidden email] or via Linkedin (www.linkedin.com/in/selchow) after June 1, 2018 (It will take a while to sort the data ...) > > Thank you very much in advance for your time and input. > > With best regards, > Olaf > > ____________________________ > Dr. Olaf Selchow > Microscopy & BioImaging Consulting > [hidden email] > +49 172 3286313 > skype: olaf.selchow -- Ralf Palmisano Head - Optical Imaging Centre Erlangen Fellow Royal Microscopical Society Member Royal Society of Medicine Speaker Scientific Advisory Board "German Society for Microscopy and Image" Analysis Board of Directors Core Technologies for Life Science Hartmannstr. 14 91052 Erlangen, Germany +49-9131-85-64300 (Office) +49-9131-85-64301 (Secretary) +49-9131-85-64302 (Fax) www.oice.uni-erlangen.de |
Olaf Selchow |
In reply to this post by Olaf Selchow
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To join, leave or search the confocal microscopy listserv, go to: http://lists.umn.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A0=confocalmicroscopy Post images on http://www.imgur.com and include the link in your posting. ***** *** Please note that this is a commercial posting - or maybe a kind of "semi-commercial" posting ;-) *** Dear Ralf, dear fellow listers, Please apologize that I didn't mark my earlier posting appropriately. This was a mistake that should not have happened. Still, please let me explain that I would like to ask you all for the favor to support my information gathering with your feedback in the below survey on Advanced Microscopy Techniques (FLIM, FCS, SMD etc). Yes, I am making my living as a professional microscopist ... and will use the information for my professional activities - as probably most of you do in one or the other way. And yes, I agree that I should have made this more transparent. On the other hand, be assured that I am not intending to sell you anything. If I am doing my job right, I am advocating your interests and requirements with commercial manufacturers and suppliers of microscopy equipment and software. I have been asked by some of you about "what would be in for you" with this survey. Well, I am a one-man show and I don't have the ressources to incentivize participants with anything else but the promise that I will use the feedback to advocate your requirements with those companies that I have the chance to work with. Please, again, accept my apologies for not making the nature of my posting very clear in the beginning. With best regards, Olaf ======== Please find the survey following the link https://goo.gl/forms/b7J32fAgqvvBaw452 ======== Thank you for your support. ____________________________ Dr. Olaf Selchow Microscopy & BioImaging Consulting [hidden email] +49 172 3286313 skype: olaf.selchow |
George McNamara |
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To join, leave or search the confocal microscopy listserv, go to: http://lists.umn.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A0=confocalmicroscopy Post images on http://www.imgur.com and include the link in your posting. ***** Hi Olaf, and confocal listserv readers, Your (Olaf's) survey asks if the respondent (i.e. me) is core staff, but then ignores the possibility that the respondent (i.e. me) is core staff. I completed it anyway, though some of my answers involve 'circular reasoning' in that I manage a microscope core and use the core's microscopes. FLIM and FCS/FCCS: I managed a Leica SP5/MP/FLIM/FCS&FCCS microscope for five years in Miami (FLIM from Becker&Hickl, having 2 FLIM PMTs inside SP5 basically made it less color capable than conventional SP5; FCS&FCCS from ISS using APDs on X1 port ... in hindsight, I should have marketed the two APDs some for simple NIRF imaging). The F-techniques were practically never used, despite my attempts to market them (of course I'm a biologist, not marketing MBA, and UMiami SOM is ~50th ranked academic medical center in U.S., not a biophysics powerhouse). My response may be easy to spot since I added ISS to manufacturers list. ISS, Leica, etc (I don't try to keep up with the marketing blizzard, now have interesting "fastFLIM" stuff on their web sites (ISS with good explanations and academic publication links, others not so clear). I encourage you to think about promoting / advising another F-technique: multiphoton fluorescence anisotropy, especially for drug studies (BODIPY-drug has high F.A. when bound to its target site [hopefully the drug company has pretty good specificity in what the drug binds to and knockout or RNAi can help evaluate this issue; 2-photon F.A. has bigger dynamic range than 1-photon ... and I seem to recall 3-p even more, which will become more relevant if/when 1700 nm lasers become more common, re: Chris Xu, Cornell Univ). See PubMed search hits for: weissleder r anisotropy FYI - F-techniques is from title of Liu 2008. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18387308 *** Some suggestions for you in your consulting/advising companies. Note: I am copying this email to the confocal listserv (I may or not bother to also post it as a linkedin blog). This is mostly with respect to the "big four" confocal microscopes -- I mostly interact with Olympus, Leica, Zeiss, so possible that Nikon has "nailed the landing" on all (or at least some) of these, I suspect not. * Confocal microscopes typically cost ~$500,000 (my guesstimate for median price of point scanning confocal microscopes) but are sold with the: ** 2018 equivalent of PC Jr. ... minimal ram, crappy (if any) GPU, no SSD; typically exactly the same PC sold with new system as whenever the confocal was introduced. I suggest 'standard of care' confocal acquisition PC should be something like: https://www.supermicro.com/products/system/4U/7049/SYS-7049GP-TRT.cfm (ok, may not need to be fully loaded with 2 Tb ram, which is $64K ... but 1 Tb = $32K is reasonable to think about on a $500K instrument --> ~$560K with this ram plus dual GV100's; no financial interest in SuperMicro now NVidia [my bank account regrets missing out on NVidia stock 3+ years ago]). ** pathetic computer monitors and graphics cards... hopefully every confocal microscope at M&M 2018 and Neurosci 2018 will be HD 4K(s) or better, taking advantage of NVidia Volta GPUs. Sure, two Quadro GV100's (15 Teraflops single precision, 32 Gb ram each) plus NVLINK2 is $18K, which is (coincidentally) the approximate price of one TIRF objective lens. ** pathetic networking ... I see 100 Gbe (100 Gigabit) Ethernet cards are available (for ~$800, as are 100 Gbe switches, $10K for 16 ports, $28K for 32 ports, amazon.com list prices). Of course all the local PC's and file/processing/analysis PCs will need/benefit from this. ** pathetic software ... for a couple of examples *** Leica's LAS X for SP8 has as crappy image math now as the TCS software (an Excel macro!!!) had when I managed a SP1 in 2000 (and the update to "LCS" at end of 2000 was equally bad). Leica and "MetaMorph" (Universal Imaging Corp --> Molecular Devices) have been sister companies inside Danaher for many years, still Leica has not 'ported' MetaMorph's Arithmetic to Leica software (nor Stack Arithmetic either). *** Leica's LAS X user interface requires moving the computer mouse between bottom left ('fast live', only available in HyVolution mode), mid-left (acquire), top right (channels on/off), mid (contrast). Sure, Zeiss ZEN Black has about equally crappy user interface -- fortunately I currently have minimal need to deal with it since our LSM510META is obsolete (and about to be retired!!! - my thanks to NIH and all the 'confocal' study section S10 grant reviewers for ok'ing our replacement confocal microscope proposal ... we are going with instrument written with some 2018 improvements). ** Spectral unmixing on Leica SP8 LAS X and Zeiss Black/LSM510: horribly bad. Most critically: Result channels on either can be in any order compared to the source images. Applied Spectral Imaging 'nailed te landing' on this in 1997 and the confocal companies still have not figured it out 21 years later. I've posted about SUN previously, so for here I'll just state: 1. get the result channels right. 2. read -- and incorporate: Valm et al https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27391327 Hoppe et al (2008 !!!) https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18339754 and https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27023704 (works on FRET, would be more useful with more plex). * New user interfaces: I'm not ready for direct neural USB or 100Gbe Ethernet, but V.R./A.R., voice, gestures ( not just middle finger up) would be useful to think about. * fully loaded image processing, analysis, visualization licenses for (essentially) free to customer labs and core facilities: the USB dongles cost $20 each (maybe less). The microscope companies should decide whether they can really make money on both hardware, bad software, and support (technical support and field service being different types of support). I suggest microscope companies should focus on developing and selling great hardware, 'nail the landing' on acquisition software, charge reasonable annual fees on annual "service contracts" (software updates, occasional hardware updates, field service), and processing/analysis/visualization software that is essentially support free. Having high quality company software -- with company name in title bar and logo visible (latter not taking too much GUI space please) would be a lot better than dumping users onto anti-user software like Fiji ImageJ and Cellprofiler, and 25 year old MetaMorph (MetaMorph is pretty good at 2D, atrocious at 3D analysis and the 3D is deficient because IMA/Measure Objects still has ~64,000 limit of thresholded features ... to say nothing of MetaMorph not being GPU enabled). ====== With respect to linkedin blogs, I encourage you to check out my blog, which I wrote because the fluorescence microscopy community (vendors, core staff, users) are STILL suck at 4 PLEX whereas flow cytometry is now routinely 12+ plex, the state of the art is 50 plex with 6 way sorting and Bob Balderas of BD said at a recent seminar will be at 60 plex and 10 way sorting in 3 years (the extra plex powered in part by adding 320 nm Lasos laser and commercializing Brilliant Deep UltraViolet ['BDUV'] -- and they have full confidence in their R&D process of achieving these). Sure, a 5 plex paper was published in 1987, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2444600 with very little follow-up (except in the tiny niche of spectral karyotyping and M-FISH, see PubMed spectral karyotyp* ). I discuss some approaches to 20 plex (plus) fluorescence microscopy at https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/resolution-blues-meets-21plex-salute-fluorescence-basic-mcnamara/ I mostly think about spectral multiplexing, but note that FLIM provides opportunities (though suspect data interpretation will be non-trivial). I'm also intrigued by the potential for CW NIR divide by 2 for Brilliant Ultraviolets and future BDUVs, given that Stefan Hell published CW 2p DAPI and Hoechst a long time ago, and Brilliant's absorb a lot better than single bound DAPI or Hoechst (though an AT-rich DNA molecule with either bound may have a whole lot of fluorophores in one voxel) ... I hope to make measurements 'soon'). I sent you (Olaf) a linkedin invitation: if you -- and/or any listserv readers (whether academic or commercial) -- visit Baltimore for Microscopy & Microanalysis (Aug 2018), please let me know and think about visiting our image core for (part or all of) a day, before or after the meeting. More thoughts -- and lots of awesome tables -- about light microscopy in our Unit (open access, so no direct financial interest; I do encourage you to read online or at least print out double sided to save some trees, and be sure to also check out the supplemental appendix) http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/cphg.42/abstract No need to print out figure 1 for your desk, you can download the image directly from http://home.earthlink.net/~tiki_goddess/TikiGoddess.jpg (looks great on HD 4K). enjoy, George p.s. your original post was clear in intent - I do not think you need(ed) to apologize to anyone. On 4/12/2018 3:02 AM, Olaf Selchow wrote: > ***** > To join, leave or search the confocal microscopy listserv, go to: > http://lists.umn.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A0=confocalmicroscopy > Post images on http://www.imgur.com and include the link in your posting. > ***** > > *** Please note that this is a commercial posting - or maybe a kind of "semi-commercial" posting ;-) *** > > Dear Ralf, dear fellow listers, > > Please apologize that I didn't mark my earlier posting appropriately. This was a mistake that should not have happened. > > Still, please let me explain that I would like to ask you all for the favor to support my information gathering with your feedback in the below survey on Advanced Microscopy Techniques (FLIM, FCS, SMD etc). > > Yes, I am making my living as a professional microscopist ... and will use the information for my professional activities - as probably most of you do in one or the other way. And yes, I agree that I should have made this more transparent. On the other hand, be assured that I am not intending to sell you anything. If I am doing my job right, I am advocating your interests and requirements with commercial manufacturers and suppliers of microscopy equipment and software. > > I have been asked by some of you about "what would be in for you" with this survey. Well, I am a one-man show and I don't have the ressources to incentivize participants with anything else but the promise that I will use the feedback to advocate your requirements with those companies that I have the chance to work with. > > Please, again, accept my apologies for not making the nature of my posting very clear in the beginning. > With best regards, > Olaf > > > ======== > Please find the survey following the link https://goo.gl/forms/b7J32fAgqvvBaw452 > ======== > > Thank you for your support. > ____________________________ > Dr. Olaf Selchow > Microscopy & BioImaging Consulting > [hidden email] > +49 172 3286313 > skype: olaf.selchow -- George McNamara, PhD Baltimore, MD 21231 [hidden email] https://www.linkedin.com/in/georgemcnamara https://works.bepress.com/gmcnamara/75 (may need to use Microsoft Edge or Firefox, rather than Google Chrome) http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/myncbi/browse/collection/44962650 http://confocal.jhu.edu July 2017 Current Protocols article, open access: UNIT 4.4 Microscopy and Image Analysis http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/cphg.42/abstract supporting materials direct link is http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/cphg.42/full#hg0404-sec-0023 figures at http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/cphg.42/figures |
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