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Re: Digital Oscilloscopes: When Things Go Wrong


 

Hi Carl,
Thanks for the link.I like how the author compared the effect of each thing done to the raw sampled data to make it more believable
Has anybody else wondered why the author, Israel Banini, chose a site devoted to health news to put his article.
Was he hoping no one would ever find it?
Did he think all DSO users should know how to tell by looking at their feet that they might soon have a heart attack?
And finally, why does the site owner believe that the article should be crammed up against the left edge of the web page making it extremely annoying to read?

Dennis Tillman W7pF

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Carl Moon via groups.io
Sent: Monday, June 01, 2020 5:36 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [TekScopes] Digital Oscilloscopes: When Things Go Wrong

DSOs (digital oscilloscopes) offer a great many advantages over their analog equivalents but as they say, ¡°There¡¯s no such thing as a free lunch.¡± Digital scopes sample, digitize, and store waveforms and let you for measure, analyze, and archive signals. But, that sampling process brings a few issues along as ¡°baggage.

Here is a few of them and how to handle them







--
Dennis Tillman W7pF
TekScopes Moderator

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