John Doty wrote: > On May 15, 2009, at 3:10 PM, Joerg wrote: >>>> I think the BF862 will be around for a long time, , , ,
> I remember this same argument over tubes. And while the haven't > exactly gone away (the reheated cup of tea in my hand is proof!) they > have been sufficiently eclipsed that for the purposes of a university > professor designing an EE curriculum they may safely be ignored. > Discrete semiconductors have the same future, but there is less here > than you think. Future designers will still have to design with > individual transistors, but they'll mostly fiddle with w, l, and m > (or whatever equivalent their HDL uses) to get them. Anybody who can > analyze the consequences of those choices can easily learn to use > discretes in the rare cases where they will be necessary. But they'll > be annoyed by the limited choices. ASIC design has spoiled me enough, > I'm already there. As soon as some of the organic semi materials are available in material layer stackups with protection against oxidation destruction gEDA tools and maybe Magic chip layout will be useful for transistor level designs just like chip design, but on a garage shop ink-jet-printing budget. There's really a need for complete, open tools for transistor design from scratch. John Griessen _______________________________________________ geda-user mailing list geda-user@moria.seul.org http://www.seul.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/geda-user