https://www.ni.com/nl-nl/shop/product/multisim.html

^^^^^

The above worthless trash known as “multisim”, used for simulating circuits costs 905 EUR and

  1. Doesn’t have a linux version
  2. Is missing 90% of new commercially available parts
  3. Doesn’t have a method of easily adding those parts (except manually, 1 by 1) (as far as I know)
  4. Has garbage UI (you can only undo 4 times) (adding or removing a single component can easily use up more than 4 moves)
  5. Inconsistent simulations (making the sims work feels like trying to appease a capricious God to not curse you with famine)

The free open source software (qucs-studio) seems to have none of these problems, though I have barely used it.

  • Owl [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    8 days ago

    The stagnation in all forms of professional software is mind-boggling. We have the same basic categories of applications as we did in the early 2000s, sometimes with more bells and whistles. These applications are highly profitable, yet there’s still a bizarre gap in investment in new ones. A bias inflicted by a system where investment is directed not by tool-users, but by people who own things for a living.

    It makes me wonder whether other tools I’m less close to, like construction equipment, have such stagnation as well.

    • sodium_nitride [she/her, any]@hexbear.netOP
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      8 days ago

      It’s even more frustrating that there is so much stagnation for professional software. Like, consumer applications have so much UI design that it’s treating you like you are its little baby child. Then you have professional software which treats you as if you were the parent and the software is the child throwing a tantrum.

      A bias inflicted by a system where investment is directed not by tool-users, but by people who own things for a living.

      There is not a chance in hell that the designers of multisim casually use multisim.

    • Huitzilopochtli [they/them]@hexbear.net
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      8 days ago

      The best is when they intentionally break the file format in minor ways every version, so that you can always import older files but the second you open them in the newer version say goodbye to any backwards compatibility.

  • Keld [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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    8 days ago

    There are several models of medical instruments where deleting files is such a hassle no one ever does it, the files just lay on the machine until the storage fills up, then some poor asshole has to delete each file one by one because you can’t just wipe the memory. There are medical students who have spent almost entire shifts at hospitals just navigating to individual files with the worst interfaces known to man and clicking delete over and over and over again.

      • Keld [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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        8 days ago

        I bet they could if literally anyone in any part of the process after this thing has been delivered knew anything about computers.

        Also one these things you navigate with a trackball and a touchpad and it can’t connect to any other machine except through a weird proprietary cable that I don’t think connects to anything with a keyboard. Actually I don’t even think the touchpad lets you do anything except scroll up and down and press enter more slowly than the trackball actually.

  • MizuTama [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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    8 days ago

    The FOSS sphere is pretty nice. More and more of my stuff is running off of self-hosted FOSS software lately. Holdouts are my workstation OS and email because I’m really lazy and those require a bunch of boring work

    • CptKrkIsClmbngThMntn [any]@hexbear.net
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      8 days ago

      Same. I can understand why professionals are locked into particular (shitty) tools and that certain features are always going to land in the FOSS equivalent later, but now I’m in deep enough, I:

      a) have toys that make most people jealous (stuff like Jellyfin and the *arr stack, my Calibre and airsonic libraries, or a personal website), and

      b) can be a jack of all trades in ways that would be way out of economic reach for those who assume that FOSS just isn’t good enough. Need someone to make an amateur photo edit, put together a video, or record a quick meme song? I can do all that because I’ve been able to afford the price ($0) of having those tools around for a decade and learning my way around them at my own pace.

      • MizuTama [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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        6 days ago

        Same. I can understand why professionals are locked into particular (shitty) tools and that certain features are always going to land in the FOSS equivalent later, but now I’m in deep enough, I:

        Also running the arr suite, jellyfin with torrenting and Usenet here. I spent a lot upfront but frankly, I’ll probably never have to buy a subscription service again outside of music (I’ve been too lazy to setup music automatically). I want to get into ripping my own content from blue-ray discs etc but have not had the motivation to work on any personal projects lately

  • wetbeardhairs@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    8 days ago

    I’m stuck using NI stuff because their hardware is good. It’s not fun. But it pays the bills so I’ll deal with it I guess.

  • scathliath@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    8 days ago

    Yeah, between working today I have been fighting youtube being unable to tell when my adblocker is paused or not and utterly being unable to scrape it’s own shit enough together to give me ads on the PC.