The IVI ActiveX controls are not supported in Visual Studio .NET. We are working on a Knowledge Base that documents this fact.
The CWGPIB and CWVISA controls should work in Visual Studio .NET. You probably don't have them because you installed support for Visual Studio .NET. These controls are intended for use in Visual Basic 6.0. If you have the Measurement Studio Professional package or the Measurement Studio Enterprise package, you should have received a second CD that includes Visual Studio 6.0 support. The ActiveX controls are on that CD.
I highly recommend, however, that you use the native .NET VISA and GPIB class libraries with Visual Basic .NET rather than the ActiveX controls. The .NET class libraries are more full featured, exhibit better performance, and should be much more natural to use in Visual Basic .NET than the ActiveX controls. Measurement Studio 7.1 Professional and Enterprise also include the Instrument I/O Assistant to help you write .NET VISA and GPIB code using these class libraries. I recommend that you check out
Getting Started with the Measurement Studio Libraries and Tools in the Measurement Studio documentation for help getting started with the libraries and the Instrument I/O Assistant. Here are some specific links that should work if you have Measurement Studio Documentation installed:
Getting StartedUsing the NI-488.2 Class LibraryUsing the VisaNS .NET Class LibraryCreating a Measurement Studio 488.2 or VISA ApplicationTo address your original post, Measurement Studio 7.1 also includes a wizard that generates C# or VB.NET wrapper code for communicating with IVI, VXIPlug&Play, and legacy C instrument drivers. You just download the instrument driver of your choice, run the wizard, point it at the instrument driver function panel (.fp) file, and it will generate code that you can use to communicate with your instrument. You would use the IVI Scope class driver to get equivalent functionality to CWIVIScope, but you would probably be better off using the IVI specific driver for your particular instrument. Here is a link to more information in the Measurement Studio Documentation:
Calling Instrument Drivers from .NET Languages.
Let us know if you have more questions, if this works for you, or if there a reason you want to use the ActiveX controls instead of the native .NET interfaces.