I used Solaris and Linux quite a lot in the past. Then I changed to XP both at home and at work, where I'm developing industrial test equipment based on an XScale platform running Windows CE.
For personal use, when I saw Vista, I promised myself that I'd change to either Linux or Mac as soon as Microsoft dropped support for XP. This year I was impressed enough by MacOS that I bought one of the new 13" MacBook Pros, although I'll admit that the new Ubuntu seems to be the best MacOS rip-off ever. I recently helped a colleague install it, and it does the two-fingered scrolling thing out of the box!
I still keep my old laptop around with XP, in case I need to use Sound Forge or program some PICs. Or use my old Pico PC-based scope, which requires a parallel port. Remember those?
When it comes to oscilloscopes, I think an old analog Tek takes a lot of beating. I have a military surplus R7603 that I got on Ebay for about $200. It has custom chips, but so far none of them have blown.
If I had to live with a digital scope as my only scope, it would be a Tek TDS210, TDS220, or their replacements, the TDS2012 and 2014. I managed happily at my previous job with just a TDS220 on the bench. We had a 400MHz Philips analog scope, but it only came out of the cupboard in emergencies.
The Owon DSOs are cheesy Chinese clones of the TDS2xx. GW Instek make something similar, I'm not sure if it is a rebadged Owon.
I would hate to be stuck with a PC-based scope, I find the user interface on them a complete pain in the butt.
Your mileage may vary, as I'm an EE and heavy scoper
For personal use, when I saw Vista, I promised myself that I'd change to either Linux or Mac as soon as Microsoft dropped support for XP. This year I was impressed enough by MacOS that I bought one of the new 13" MacBook Pros, although I'll admit that the new Ubuntu seems to be the best MacOS rip-off ever. I recently helped a colleague install it, and it does the two-fingered scrolling thing out of the box!
I still keep my old laptop around with XP, in case I need to use Sound Forge or program some PICs. Or use my old Pico PC-based scope, which requires a parallel port. Remember those?
When it comes to oscilloscopes, I think an old analog Tek takes a lot of beating. I have a military surplus R7603 that I got on Ebay for about $200. It has custom chips, but so far none of them have blown.
If I had to live with a digital scope as my only scope, it would be a Tek TDS210, TDS220, or their replacements, the TDS2012 and 2014. I managed happily at my previous job with just a TDS220 on the bench. We had a 400MHz Philips analog scope, but it only came out of the cupboard in emergencies.
The Owon DSOs are cheesy Chinese clones of the TDS2xx. GW Instek make something similar, I'm not sure if it is a rebadged Owon.
I would hate to be stuck with a PC-based scope, I find the user interface on them a complete pain in the butt.
Your mileage may vary, as I'm an EE and heavy scoper
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