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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 ...
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 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 ...
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, ...
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 ...
PC-based oscilloscope maker Pico Technology has introduced a repetitive sampling facility on its 100MHz digital storage scope which boosts sample rate to 5Gsample/s. The firm’s ADC-212, a 100MHz ...
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 ...
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