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For some time I considered buying a PC-based oscilloscope, but most of them are very function-limited with poor software. Good ones cost as much as, or even more than normal DSO.
The PicoScope 5204 is a USB PC oscilloscope that delivers the bandwidth, sampling, and memory depth of expensive conventional bench oscilloscopes. The instrument provides two channels plus an external ...
The PicoScope 9400A Series is built on Pico’s SXRTO technology and the latest three models are additions to the previously ...
Connected to a PC and powered through its USB 2.0 port, the dual-channel PicoScope 2202 oscilloscope delivers 8-bit resolution, a sampling rate of 20 Msamples/s, and a 32-kbyte memory depth. When used ...
The new generation includes the embedding of a PC into an oscilloscope product. Today, 95% of DSOs regularly move data to a PC. There are good reasons for doing this—a better display, ...
To make your own Arduino based oscilloscope, follow these four steps.Your board will be able to use up to four input channels at frequencies up to 7 kHz and as many as seven input channels at 4 kHz.
The PicoScope® 6000E Series fixed-resolution and FlexRes® oscilloscopes provide 8 to 12 bits of vertical resolution, with up to 1 GHz bandwidth and 5 GS/s sampling rate. Available with four or ...
anyone know how I can cheaply convert my PC to an oscilloscope to analyze audio signals (AKA doesn't need to be super-high sample rate)? I've used LabView in school before, but it's damn expensive ...
Here’s a USB oscilloscope project from a few years back. It’s easy to build on a single-sided PCB and very cheap because it uses just a handful of parts. At the center, an ATtiny45 micr… ...
Pico Technology has cut the size of its 2000 series of 200MHz PC oscilloscopes by almost 80%, to around the size of a passport, in a project that started as a challenge between engineers. “They are as ...
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