This week, National Instruments unveiled a USB-to-GPIB controller that takes advantage of the high-speed USB 2.0 specification to offer transfer rates up to 1.8 Mbytes/s in standard IEEE 488.1 mode ...
For controlling test instruments, the 488-USB2 USB to GPIB controller module converts desktop or portable PCs with a USB 1.1 or USB 2.0 port into a an IEEE 488.2-compatible bus controller. The unit ...
Engineers and scientists now can use the latest USB standard, USB 2.0 high-speed, to control GPIB instruments at transfer rates of up to 8 MBytes/sec. The new National Instruments GPIB-USB-HS, claimed ...
With the 1105 USB-to-GPIB hub controller, any desktop or portable PC with a USB interface is converted into a full-function, IEEE-488.2-compatible bus controller. USB instruments complying with the ...
National Instruments has introduced its first Mac-compatible USB-GPIB controller as well as a low-profile PCI Express GPIB controller. With the NI USB-GPIB-HS, Mac users can now control their ...
Combining a GPIB controller and USB hub in a single, 7'' x 7'' x 1.5'' case, the Model 1105 plug-and-play peripheral is designed to provide control of both GPIB- and USB-based instruments. The GPIB ...
If you’re not so daft as to think Arduino-based oscilloscopes and multimeters are actually useful for all but the simplest tests and measurements, you just might have some big iron sitting around your ...
Dust off that old GPIB hardware and hook it up to your modern computing platform using either of these two solutions. If you haven’t a clue what we’re talking about you probably don’t own any ...