The thread raises an interesting point though. Is there any decent digital bench scope with a significantly smaller footprint than the rigol?
Dave.
I think the problem is people have come to expect a scope to be a particular shape, and any scope needs a minimum number of controls at a minimum size, so maintaining the same shape with reduced size is going to make the controls too small.
There is the occasional oddball like Yokogawa who made some mac classic style scopes with a vertical form factor,
And although this makes sense for bench use, it is less useful for over-bench equipment shelves as the screen ends up too high, and even they seem to have moved away from this form factor. Lecroy have their gimmicky swivelling screen scope, but I see no reason in principle why you couldn't make a scope like the Rigol that could be stood on its end, and have it auto-rotate, i-pad style.
You could even make a scope with a touchscreen and overlay the controls on the screen, but at the end of the day the T&M market is very conservative and anything unusual, even if significantly better, is going to have a hard time getting into the market.
In practice the only way you're going to get a significantly smaller footprint is to go for a handheld, at the expense of fiddlier controls and higher cost.