Typical socialist banter, especially the last one which is an absolute classic. "Isn't it terrible that the nasty evil corporations, who only exist to chase dollar signs, exploit overseas workers and destroy the environment, keep their prices deliberately high to prevent Africa developing..." or some such bollocks. The things are expensive, deal with it. And if you don't like their attitude, don't buy. Simple.
Except that if anything, I'm a Libertarian. Nonetheless...
"corporations, who exist only to chase <profit>" is true. That is by definition, charter and structure, exactly what corporations do. And cannot do anything but. The debate over whether it's a good idea to allow the existence of immortal, soulless abstract entities, legally granted the same rights (or better in some cases) as living persons, and who's implicit objectives are in conflict with fundamental human needs, is another whole topic.
"Exploit overseas workers" is true. Deal with it. Not to mention having transfered the jobs from local workers in the first place. All for profit maximization, and screw the national economy.
"Destroy the environment" is also in many cases true. Comes from that 'no ability or desire to do anything but maximize profits' thing.
Your "... Africa" bit is pure strawman bollocks. However with the 'keep from developing' part you're getting close to a truth. I didn't originally want to touch on this aspect but since you bring it up... google 'Agenda 21'. And don't bother trying to pretend it's some wacky conspiracy theory. It's real, it's a UN initiative, budget, power, official website, international conferences, the whole globalist works. I won't bother trying to explain it here, too complicated. A few primer links here:
http://everist.org/archives/links/!_Agenda_21.txt
Then do some reading on the phrase 'disruptive technology', who was talking about it, and why. Enjoy the deep, deep rabbit hole.
Another linked theme is why western societies over the last few decades suddenly decided there was no social obligation to ensure the next generation had a decent education, without burdening them with crippling debt. But I suppose now your 'socialist hackles' are rising again, so little point trying to tell you it's all part of the same deliberate trend. Nope, despite that we have a highly technology-dependent civilization, any talk of needing to keep a useful fraction of the population technically capable (and that includes having access to useful test gear) is just socialist babble, right?
If it's so simple, make one! You'll sell shit loads if you can get the price to, say $1/MHz. After all you don't need to do any R&D, you can design it on the back of a fag packet in 5 minutes. You'll put those nasty corporations out of business overnight and stop those evil capitalists exploiting Chinese children once and for all.
Now you're being silly/abusive, and distorting what I said. Which wasn't that it's 'simple', just that the existing test equip companies have been doing this for so long _they_ could make lower end scopes cheaply if they wanted to.
Oh, and notice that there are quite a few small companies that are in fact doing small, cheap USB-based sampling heads, with scope software for PCs. I'm quite hoping these start to give companies like Agilent & Tek some serious competition, and force Tek/Agilent to quit their 'low end high prices' games.
Except of course, there's the patents problem...
And if you don't like their attitude, don't buy. Simple.
Exactly right. I don't. I buy older gear that does the job I need it for, *and* I can get full maintenance manuals with schematics.
If you want to know how politically extreme I can be, here's an example: I think it should be illegal to sell any product without the *full* technical documentation being freely publicly available. That includes all schematics, binaries, source code, etc. (Well, not so much 'illegal', but with arrangements that advantage entities that *do* make that information available. Something like a clear compliance branding, that only products where all the docs are available qualify to carry the mark. Thus letting the market encourage compliance.)