Philipp Hachtmann wrote:
On 17.02.2017 17:21, Kyle Owen wrote:
On Fri, Feb 17, 2017 at 10:01 AM, Philipp
Hachtmann <hachti at hachti.de>
KiCad has no affiliation to Arduino; in fact,
it's being heavily maintained
by CERN.
But wherever I (!) look, in my part of the universe, a strongly biased
and personal view, I see only those Arduino folks using it.
Might be different in other places, but...
With the licensing model Eagle has just moved
to, alternatives like KiCad sure seem attractive.
The new Eagle license model is a
mess. I will stick to my Eagle 7. The
idea of my little board designs being held hostage by a company
somewhere is not good.
And when the day has come that I can't go with the then old Eagle
anymore and the licensing has not been repaired, then I will think about
alternatives. Perhaps then KiCAD has already changed into the greatest
EDA tool ever made.
Simply take a look now and then ..to adjust your point of view.
Why are you bent out of shape over the Arduino
community? It seems clear to
me that teenagers growing up with them will outgrow the language and
hardware limitations and move onto more advanced things before starting
their careers. I think one could make a decent analogy to BASIC on many
8-bit microcomputers from decades past.
Easy: If I had the impression that it is like you write, I'd be totally
fine with it!
But back in those days with BASIC it was easier to take the next step.
If you want to go further beyond Arduino, you will have to instantly
understand a huge amount of stuff.
In my opinion the learning step from using a fancy Arduino library to
understanding/modifying/writing another is too big.
In BASIC it started with little things like peek and poke.
There was no hidden C++ :-)
Agreed.
I'm used some of the "shields" for aruinos from time to time, but I
never used that arduino software for it. Ok, sometimes it is neccesary
to look into a library to finally find out how the hardware is to be
programmed..but I always wrote the code of my own. At least the masses
of arduino related stuff drops the prices for interresting hardware stuff
to play with.
Regards,
Holm
--
Technik Service u. Handel Tiffe,
www.tsht.de, Holm Tiffe,
Freiberger Stra?e 42, 09600 Obersch?na, USt-Id: DE253710583
info at tsht.de Fax +49 3731 74200 Tel +49 3731 74222 Mobil: 0172 8790 741