Trigger, yes I would agree with you. If you are starting out a career in this area then arduino should not be your only tool, but it could still be useful for mucking around with. I am in tune with what you are meaning.
It is in the marketing with arduino, they market it as a simple way to get in to this area but I was trying to make it clear that you still have a lot of freedom to go low level with the chips that they support.
I agree that they would primarily be used at a hobby level but it wouldn't surprise me one bit to find they are at the heart of some small quantity/niche commercial products.
Slightly to the side of this, when I joined the board from looking at the blogs, I thought this board was a lot about hobbyists, although I get your specific points when addressing questions like the OP. I guessed that the content Dave was delivering wasn't aimed at already established EE's.
What I don't get is stuff like BoredAtWork says about it in this thread i.e. 'The whole Arduino environment is made for hand holding artists and similar people who "won't get it"' or 'So with AVRs you have on one child toys catering for the idiots (Arduino)'
This may be my wrong perception of what this forum is about but I didnt join because I am an EE. I am no idiot as either, with my background this already seems quite intuitive. I have done a lot of bitshifting in the past in the computing space.
You pick the right tool for the job and sometimes that could be the idiots tool but I have seen many an 'idiot' sitting waiting for the expert to finish
I only look at the forums to see that the beginners section has the second highest number of posts behind general, and I would think most of them will never have a career in EE. So while I see comment like BoredAtWork may be more appropriate at a forum for professional engineers I don't see how it fit's in with the audience here?
Anyway, my 2c.