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ArdOsc is an awesome Arduino oscilloscope project built using an Arduino Nano and a tiny 1.3” OLED display. Created by maker Peter Balch the Arduino oscilloscope can display data on a computer ...
[Privatier] wrote in to let us know about lxardoscope, his project that lets you use an Arduino as hardware input for a Linux-based oscilloscope display. This implementation offers two channels ...
However, [lonesoulsurfer] went a different route with this fun DIY build, creating an oscilloscope with a low-resolution LED display. Yes, the signals are shown on a 10×10 matrix made up of red LEDs.
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.
Watch this video on YouTube. “Learning to use a new oscilloscope can be daunting. In this video, I show 5 measurements you can make using just an Arduino as your DUT.
In 1958 physicist William Higinbotham created a basic tennis simulation, similar to 1972’s Pong, that ran on an analogue computer and with an oscilloscope display.
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