Now looking at this device, one of the first things you realize with it is that it doesn't actually have any buttons or switches or wheels on it at all. It is entirely and utterly seamless.
Everything in this device, from the shutter to the zoom (and there is a zoom in it albeit a limited one), is handled at the software level, so as you probe the patient with the device, you take the pictures in Nikon Capture RX.
Now this might make your computer or laptop a little bit messy, I imagine, and this was one of the first problems I thought about as I was beginning to review this unit, but if you're really not worried about mess or if you have a nurse or other medical practitioner on site, it's probably not a major concern.
At the software level, Capture RX is quite stable… more so than I had actually expected out of Nikon programmers.
On the toolbar, six buttons have been added into Nikon Capture RX from its original program Nikon Capture allowing you to switch in and out of thermal imaging
mode, press the shutter, control the zoom, eject the plug mechanism that keeps the device connected, and turn on the “light assist” that you have on-board which itself consists of 4 sets of 4 micro-dot white LED’s that sit around the lens on the top of the X^3.
Now what sort of review would this be if it didn't actually have a test run in it? They'd have to make this a preview of sorts and I'm not in the business of making previews, as a reviewer.
I'll tell you, when I looked at the list of the ten people who would be receiving a sample X^3 unit to test out and review, I was the only one on it without a degree of some sort in medicine.
So, without my medical degree, I can't exactly walk up to a girl and say "would you mind if I used your vagina for a medical test with a new medical camera?"
I'd get slapped. It's a shocking pick-up line, even for me.
So I went out and bought a frozen chicken.
I figured that instead of causing myself gross uncomfort by shoving this new toy firmly between my two cheeks, I could see what the inside of my dinner looks like.
And this is what happened.
The installation of this device is a breeze to do.
You install the software, Nikon Capture RX with its version of Nikon Capture Control, first and then you can go ahead and plug the device in.
Plugging it in works like this: the cable has a long and thin needle-like part which gets thick in plastic towards the head of the plug. You put that end inside that bottom of the X^3 where the long hole is and twist it clockwise until it clicks in, and you'll feel it.
Honestly, it’s hard not to feel it. There’s a bit of resistance as the plug connects when you twisted it and then it’s firmly in place.
The cable you get with the X^3 measures at around 3 meters long, but Nikon have assured me that they will be releasing upon launch extended cables for sizes rated for 5 meters, 7 meters, and 10 meters long.
Now, once your plug has been clicked into place, you’ll notice that you can’t actually remove it. Well, this is where the eject button in Nikon Capture RX comes into play. The software handles pretty much everything short of handling the device so this should be no surprise.
So after plugging the X^3 into its connection plug and placing my “patient” on the table next to the computer I was working at, I pushed the X^3 inside to take a look around.
Have you ever looked inside a dead chicken? It’s a far less enjoyable experience than eating one.
Regardless, controlling the Nikon X^3 with Nikon Capture RX is a breeze.
The software picks up the device almost immediately and starts feeding back an image of whatever the device is looking at. If you don’t have enough light, pressing the button next to the eject button labeled as an “L” (I would’ve thought a light bulb would have been a better symbol myself) will turn on the 16 white micro-dot LED’s that line the four quadrants around the lens giving you enough light to see what you need to see and without injuring your patient.
Taking a picture is really quite easy. The button next to your thermal imaging option (which we’ll approach next) looks like a circle with a black dot in it. Press that and a picture will be saved to either Nikon’s default save location or wherever you’ve configured it to save to in the options.
So far, I was finding nothing unusual about my chicken. It was fairly clean and I wasn’t happy with that. I mean here I have a medical camera with thermal imaging capability and I haven’t found any wounds or problems with a B grade chicken?!
Oh yes, that’s right! I hadn’t turned on the thermal imaging yet.
And when you do turn it on, everything goes black and colors indicate what’s going on, so in my case, I saw some sort of damaged tissue that had been eaten away by some sort of bacteria on the thigh. It showed up with traced green and dark green lines at the edges where it had been eaten by what were probably relatively harmless bacteria and small red and blue splotches where more damage at the molecular level seemed to still be occurring.
This was weird but oh so cool. It was almost worth giving this thing a wash and sticking it in my mouth. I wasn’t going to do it, but the thought did cross my mind.
So I took a few shots of this infected chicken and opted to order pizza for dinner.