[Author Prev][Author Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Author Index][Thread Index]
Re: gEDA-user: gEDA gets some great press!
This is why I am thinking about putting together a talk for student
chapters of IEEE. I intend to present geda... show them how it works and
what can be done with it. then I intend to show the code and answer
questions about how the code and file structures work. Then... do you
need to do a senior level project. How about rewritting the auto router
for pcb? How about looking into transmission line modeling for...pcb.
There is a wealth of projects that students could do with this pile of
code. And a wealth of advisers and evaluators. How much more cool could
a project be then toi end up with others using it... And.... lets say
you are a student and you want to work for one of those EDA
companies.... What better way of demonstrating your interest then by
adding a feature to geda... Ask the coorporate recruiters if they would
rather have you working for them or working for open source eda?
Ouch did we just bend an arm?
Steve Meier
Al Davis wrote:
On Tuesday 14 December 2004 01:54 pm, John Eaton wrote:
It always irk's me when someone says that Open Source isn't
"professional caliber" or lacks user support.
But remember who said that. It is just a vendor defending his
own product, It is a vendor of low end cad, that could be
threatened by open source. Although we don't like that, it is
really to be expected.
We really should take that as a challenge. Take a critical look
at our own stuff, and ask what it would take to make it truly
"professional caliber". In particular, look at how the tools
interact.
What really irks me is when educators say that. Too many
schools with EE programs use only proprietary software and
black box proprietary hardware. Often they use the "free"
version of proprietary software, that is crippled so it is just
adequate for homework assignments, then they back down on the
material taught to make it fit the crippled software. Then at
the senior/grad level, they buy the full version, but only for
the lab, so the students need to actually go to the lab to do
simple simulations. They live in the lab, just to use
proprietary software. Then they graduate, and can't rerun
their own lab experiments because they don't have the
proprietary software, or the license expired. I will shut up
now.