
Liquid Instruments Announces Industry-First Generative Instrumentation, Bringing Agentic AI to Test and Measurement
"We see a future where engineers and scientists describe what they want, and the instrument configures itself," said Dr. Rory Smith, Lead AI Instrumentation Engineer at Liquid Instruments. "Generative Instrumentation won't just simplify everyday tasks — it will enable the creation of entirely new capabilities on demand, unlocking test setups that were previously impossible or impractical."
This new capability, supported in an upcoming release of MokuOS, is enabled by the launch of Moku:Delta, the fourth generation hardware platform from Liquid Instruments. Moku:Delta delivers best-in-class instrument performance, including:
The highest resolution, 2 GHz oscilloscope
The only spectrum analyzer that provides full 2 GHz bandwidth down to 0 Hz for 1/f noise measurements
The highest-channel count, ultra-low noise, microwave lock-in amplifier
Up to 8 instrument slots and 15 standard instruments
More than 2 billion possible custom instrument configurations
"We created Moku:Delta to help engineers go faster, think bigger, and stay focused on the hard problems," said Daniel Shaddock, CEO of Liquid Instruments. "It's also the first step in a new era of generative instrumentation, bringing together the performance of hardware, the flexibility of software, and the creative potential of AI."
With a growing suite of Moku platforms, including Moku:Go, Moku:Lab, Moku:Pro, and now Moku:Delta, Liquid Instruments continues to empower engineers and scientists to drive innovation in industries including quantum, semiconductor, and aerospace and defence.
"Moku:Delta's leap in bandwidth and channel count is exactly what we've been waiting for. We've never had this level of flexibility and performance combined in a single platform," said Associate Professor Francis Bennet, laser communication research group leader at the ANU Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics. "With 2 GHz bandwidth and 8 analog inputs and outputs, it delivers everything we need — all in one device."
About Liquid Instruments
Developing complex technologies requires increasingly sophisticated test systems, but the uniqueness of most applications demands adaptable, customized configurations. Traditional multi-instrument setups add significant cost and time, both upfront and throughout the test cycle. Liquid Instruments' reconfigurable Moku is the only integrated test solution engineered for seamless customization — whether for simple tests or intricate multi-instrument environments. Used in hundreds of labs worldwide, Moku accelerates the journey from idea to implementation by an order of magnitude, cutting the time and cost of advanced research and development. Designed by researchers for researchers, Moku delivers unparalleled efficiency in today's most complex test scenarios while adapting to your evolving needs in the future. Experience Moku cost-free by requesting a demo today at https://liquidinstruments.com.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Economist
15 minutes ago
- Economist
British labour is a bargain
Success stories in the British economy have been rare of late. But there is one notable exception: the boom in selling services abroad. Over the past decade, Britain's services exports have grown by around 45% in inflation-adjusted terms, even as the wider economy grew by only 11%. America has been a particularly good customer. British services-export volumes across the Atlantic are up by 70% compared with 2016 (see chart 1).


Economist
15 minutes ago
- Economist
British stocks and bonds look like a bargain
Putting money into an emerging market always carries a frisson of danger. Governments might make sudden, erratic decisions, sending investments plummeting. That risk also makes those assets cheaper, to draw in willing buyers. British assets, too, have started to look cheap in recent years, at least compared with those of other rich countries. Last week's spectacle in the House of Commons, where the Labour government was cowed by its own backbenchers into withdrawing a fairly minor cut to disability benefits, then briefly pummelled by the bond market as a result, helps explain why.


BBC News
15 minutes ago
- BBC News
Crime scene forensics used to recreate British hillfort siege
A team of archaeologists has created the most precise reconstruction yet of a Roman siege on a British hillfort by using crime scene eventual victory at Burnswark Hill in 140AD is considered to be one of Rome's greatest military triumphs north of Hadrian's well as archaeological mapping from four excavations and several geophysics surveys, the reconstruction experts also used forensic ballistics to determine the sequence of Stuart Campbell from the Trimontium Trust said that using all the evidence and information available he thought the finished walkthrough was "fantastic". Although attempts had previously been made to invade and colonise northern Britain, emperor Hadrian had settled for dividing the islands with a successor in 138AD, Antonius Pius came to power without any military victories to his name and decided to make his mark in what is now two years later a 5,000-strong army marched north towards the indigenous stronghold of Burnswark Hill where they created siege camps on either 3,000 locals were either living - or had taken refuge - within the hillfort's palisade John Reid of the Trimontium Trust said: "Antonius Pius sends his Legate - or senior general in Britain - to take Caledonia for him and for Rome."The first thing they hit when coming from Hadrian's Wall is Burnswark Hill." The results of an archaeological survey of the site a decade ago were added to previous data and finds from studies which took place in the 1890s, 1920s and using drones, the Trimontium Trust was able create an accurate 3D terrain model of the Roman camps and the ballistics pinpointed the angles of attack and mapping allowed precision detailing on the recreation down to a 2cm (0.8in) pebble within the over a year the archaeologists worked with digital artist Robert Gapper of Virtual Histories to build the 3D Campbell added: "One of the advantages of Burnswark is that there is so much still on the ground to start with."Because it is such an unique site, we've been able to drop people, buildings and weapons - in their appropriate styles - into where they would have been to create this overview." Featuring more than 8,000 individual characters, the 3D digital reconstruction relives the moments before the Roman army stormed the to the Trimontium Museum in Melrose can now use headsets for a virtual walkthrough of the unfolding Reid added: "We know missiles were shot in showers and did some serious damage - they were travelling at speeds of up to 70 metres per second."Then there were arrows from Syrian archers, and ballista balls - the size of grapefruits - being shot from the three platforms, and finally the sling bullets, which were anti-personnel weapons to take arms, legs and heads off."Then from the main camp there would have been a rapid outpouring of infantry heading straight up to the summit to breakthrough the defences."They quickly broke through and - from evidence - herded the last of the resistance to the west end of the hill."