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Black and white oscilloscope
- To: Peter Kammel <kammel@npl.uiuc.edu>
- Subject: Black and white oscilloscope
- From: Peter Winter <peter.winter@psi.ch>
- Date: Sun, 09 Jul 2006 14:02:04 +0200
- Cc: Robert Carey <carey@budoe.bu.edu>, Steve Clayton <smclayto@uiuc.edu>, Fred Gray <fegray@socrates.Berkeley.EDU>, Malte Hildebrandt <malte.hildebrandt@psi.ch>, Brendan Kiburg <kiburg@npl.uiuc.edu>, Sara Knaack <sknaack@uiuc.edu>, Maev Evgeny <maev@hep486.pnpi.spb.ru>, Marat Vznuzdaev <marat@mail.pnpi.spb.ru>, Claude Petitjean <Claude.Petitjean@psi.ch>, "G.E. Petrov" <petrovge@mail.pnpi.spb.ru>, Semenchuk Gennadii <semench@hep486.pnpi.spb.ru>, Vladimir Tishchenko <tishenko@pa.uky.edu>
- In-reply-to: <Pine.LNX.4.21.0606141431360.28292-100000@one.npl.uiuc.edu>
- References: <Pine.LNX.4.21.0606141431360.28292-100000@one.npl.uiuc.edu>
- User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux i686; en-US; rv:1.7.3) Gecko/20040913
Dear all,
I hope everybody enjoyed the recent days in order to relax after the
long run. Here at PSI, we prepare for the upcoming MuLan run and the
question came up if somebody knows about the second small black and
white oscilloscope owned by James Madison University. We have one in use
and I looked through all cabinets for the other one. If somebody of you
has an idea where to find the second scope, I'd be thankful for any hints.
See you
Peter