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Bead probe technology is a probing method used to connect electronic test equipment to the device under test (DUT) within a bed of nails fixture. The technique was first used in the 1990s [ 3 ] and originally given the name “Waygood Bump” after one of the main proponents, Rex Waygood.
Technoprobe was founded in Merate near Milan in 1996 by Giuseppe Crippa, who had developed a new and more rapid method to manufacture probe cards. [2] In 2007, Technoprobe marketed the first probe card with vertical MEMS. [3] By 2017, it was the world's third largest manufacturer of probe cards, [4] and by 2020, it was second largest. [2] [5] [6]
Cycling probe technology utilizes a cyclic, isothermal process that begins with the hybridization of the chimeric probe with the target DNA. Once hybridized, the probe becomes a suitable substrate for RNase H. RNase H, an endonuclease, cleaves the RNA portion of the probe
TaqMan probes are hydrolysis probes that are designed to increase the specificity of quantitative PCR.The method was first reported in 1991 by researcher Kary Mullis at Cetus Corporation, [1] and the technology was subsequently developed by Hoffmann-La Roche for diagnostic assays and by Applied Biosystems (now part of Thermo Fisher Scientific) for research applications.
Probe cards are broadly classified into needle type, vertical type, and MEMS (Micro Electro-Mechanical System) [4] type depending on shape and forms of contact elements. MEMS type is the most advanced technology currently available. The most advanced type of probe card currently can test an entire 12" wafer with one touchdown.
Gen-Probe was a company based in San Diego, in California, specializing in clinical diagnostics, blood screening, transplantation products and research products.. The company's molecular diagnostics products were used for diagnosis of infectious diseases, blood screening, analyzing blood transfusions for immune response, testing coagulation pathways, and organ transplantation viability.
Vernier Software & Technology is an educational software company located in Beaverton, Oregon that produces technology used for scientific education. Vernier is one of the first companies [ 3 ] to popularize the use of computers and sensor technology, known as "probeware" [ 4 ] or "Microcomputer Based Labs" (MBL), during laboratory experiments.
NetScout Systems, Inc. (stylized as NETSCOUT) is a provider of application performance management and network performance management products located in Westford, Massachusetts. In July 2015, NetScout acquired the communications business of Danaher Corporation , including Arbor Networks , Fluke Networks , Tektronix Communications and VSS ...