An analog oscilloscope is suitable for a majority of applications and there is a minority of applications where an analog oscilloscope is better than a DSO. However a novice is unlikely to be able to recognize their own requirements and evaluate a used instrument making a new but expensive DSO more desirable.
That is a way too generic statement. What I hated about my 20MHz analog scope was that it absolutely sucked at showing slow waveforms and I needed to count divisions + do math to get amplitude, time, frequency, etc.
I guess that's being considered as minor things maybe?
Yes, I also like digital scopes much better for these reasons.
But on the other side, back in the days we even didn't have that luxury?
So in a sense I totally agree with that statement a lot.
I see to many people bragging about their fancy equipment, but most of the time they don't even using it.
Or even worse, don't even take people serious anymore with cheaper equipment.
The fact that someone is on a tight budget, doesn't mean that they don't know what they are doing.
(in fact, it's mostly the opposite)
Ones again, people go into details. I think everyone can see/read that digital scopes have a lot more luxury.
But, hey, if you just wanna develop stuff and you're on a tight budget, there are options available
In fact, in most cases you only wanna see if signals are coming through, so you don't even need math functions.
Only thing I would like to add to the video, is that it's not entirely fair.
The cheap scopes are all based in the US or Asia. So that means you have to pay a lot of import tax and shipping.
Second hand market in EU is actually pretty bad to be honest.
People ask ridiculous prices or trash it. There is nothing in between.