If we look at traditional equipment brokers, we can find more stability, but it's at typically delusional values. I do understand they have overhead to accommodate, and offer some levels of warranty (usually). However if we look at the more traditional, independent marketplaces, the range in pricing is a bit astounding. Like I had said in the past, if I was opening up XYZ corps checkbook, there would be no hesitation to use a broker or buy new.
If that item stays under $6k it would be fair (IMO). If it climbs past $7k I think it's possibly overvalued. Granted it is a very nice tool-set.
The problems I am talking about, in regards to complexity...is mostly complexity for complexities sake. The products I design are almost always an attempt to employ complexity, ONLY when it leads to a necessary reduction of complexity in the end users hands. Or when it is necessary to do something very very specific. I do however, see a lot of the complexity for complexity sake approaches.
What I mean by "real engineering", is that I see a general trend towards using non discreet packages and "do it all" SoC. I know the ideals behind this are to simplify and diversify, but that kills all the cleverness involved (IMO). It delegates us to being nothing more than OTS component selectors and assemblers.
For example with a modern PoL controller, I have a vast array of functions that I can control and quantify, that do nothing more than mirror traditional passive component applications.
Yes the size is spared, but at the expense of over complexity, and un-necessary or redundant functions. Which obviously leads to some power and resource wastage, and dramatically increased the need for overly complex analysis chains.
Of course electronics is math....but when it exceeds the math one can do in their lifetime, to solve what was traditionally solved in a simple way, would you agree there might be a problem?
It seems to be the same scenario with code structures.....so much modern code is object based and bloated/redundant....it instils a bit of laziness and "bucks" the more traditional systems of efficiency, which spurred so much innovation
I'm not sure any of this stuff makes life easier, as you spend as much time debating and analyzing and maintaining the systems that were supposed to make that reality. I know the majority of my engineering time is spent analyzing the systems and pace of development....than actually worrying about innovation. Such is the hyper-consumerist marketplace. The time is not spent to make things mature. the time is spent on designing systems to take less time to design systems

Strange that I would pick a test equipment forum to drop such bombshells ?
