A native Mac workflow built for speed and focus.
This is not a browser-based viewer. DN Viewer is a native macOS app designed for fast image review and direct access to the studies you need.
MRI advantage on Mac: save your reading layout once and it comes back automatically for each new study. No manual rearranging, no loading screens — your protocol is just there.
Platform
- Native macOS app — no browser, no Electron overhead.
- Free download — no subscription required for core DICOM viewing and reading.
- Requires macOS 12 Monterey or later (formerly Mac OS X). Optimised for Apple Silicon.
Connectivity & Access
- Direct DICOM server access from the Mac desktop.
- DICOMweb support for modern web-based imaging workflows.
- Download studies from the internet with custom teleradiology support.
- Open local DICOM files directly from USB, CD/DVD, or any folder.
Visualization & Review
- Near-instant MPR for faster spatial review on Mac.
- 3D render inside the same Mac reading workflow.
- MRI layouts reopen automatically for each study — no rearranging needed.
AI & Reporting
- AI-powered segmentation and volume calculation tools for faster region selection.
- AI-assisted reporting with speech-to-text, AI-enabled drafting, and validation checks — significantly cutting down report drafting time.
- Chat and AI features without leaving the Mac viewer.
How DN Viewer compares on Mac
If you've been using OsiriX, Horos, or a browser-based viewer, here's how DN Viewer fits in.
- vs OsiriX Lite: OsiriX Lite is capped at 2D viewing and is no longer actively developed for modern macOS. DN Viewer adds MPR, 3D rendering, DICOM server connectivity, and AI tools — and runs natively on Apple Silicon.
- vs Horos: Horos is open-source and feature-rich, but setup is complex and updates are infrequent. DN Viewer is actively maintained, installs in minutes from the Mac App Store, and includes built-in AI-assisted reporting.
- vs browser-based viewers: Web DICOM viewers depend on your internet connection and browser performance. DN Viewer runs natively, so MPR and 3D rendering use the GPU directly — no browser overhead, no tab to lose track of.