Google body
PeriVision did a nice technical review of the web3D platform running on a older PC and also highlighted that you cannot test this is you are using their new Google CR-48 Chrome OS laptop because you cannot upgrade to the latest Chrome 9 Beta. IT seems the web3D platform is using upwards of 400 MB of ram to render the images inside your Chrome browser window which is a struggle for older PCs but most come standard these days with a few gig so most modern PCs should be fine.
Real-time medical visualisations
It seems that a Medical Working Group has been established to ensure an open interoperable standard is developed that can be based on input from a wide variety of imaging sources so a single interoperable file format can be used. It is also beneficial to platforms like the Google Body Browser as researchers can take exported data produced by different medical equipment (CAT,MRI,PET) and fuse them into a single and coherent 3D data set. The benefits are that this real-time medical visualisations can be used for surgical training, patient diagnostics and even patient education on how it occurred, what is the impact and how the treatment will