... which is that an analog scope (a tool you correctly said is for looking at waveforms) doesn't give you any numbers
Nonsense. OK, it doesn't spoonfeed you with digits, but the numbers are there for the moderately intelligent. Or, if you aren't sufficiently intelligent to determine the numbers, then you aren't intelligent enough to use a scope in the first place!
In short, it solely relies on user interpretation. Thanks for confirming
Besides, I wouldn't exactly consider clinging to yesteryear's test gear a sign of intelligence
Parallax has the benefit that it directly and visibly has to be understood. OTOH, it is very difficult to spot and correct problems with DSOs internal algorithms.
No, it isn't, at least not if you have a rudimentary understanding as to what's going on.
You acknowledge that in...
No, I don't. In fact, people were pretty quick identifying the various bugs in their Rigol (or Siglent) gear. The issue wasn't identifying the bugs, the isse was that the products in question were clearly not mature enough to be released, and the slow response of the manufacturer in fixing the bugs.
But as someone who only superficially follows the various Rigol threads I can't say how mature the measurement functionality in Rigol scopes is, but personally I wouldn't touch a product, which at the end of the day is supposed to be a test instrument you want to rely on for your measurements, is thrown to market with such a large number of bugs and with the hardware idiocracies listed in the "Yaigol" thread. But I understand that the low price tag can be very tempting.
So, it appears that your "DSOs are always best" kind of statements are implicitly presuming that the DSO is actually a high-end professional-grade expensive DSO from a reputable manufacturer.
No, my "these days investing money in anything else than a DSO is silly" kind of statements are implicitly presuming that the DSO isn't made by some crappy B-brand which regulary releases products full of bugs but by a reputable big brand. That neither implies "high-end" nor "expensive", unless you consider entry-level scopes like the R&S HMO1200 or Keysight DSOX2000 "high-end". Or an old HP 54600 Series scope for that matter, which despite being roughly 20yrs old, still tops most analog scopes. And these scopes regularly go for a couple of hundred dollars these days.
Also, let's talk about prices. That Tek 475, which actually
*was* high-end back then, did cost around $1700 in the mid-70's, that's roughly $10k in today's money. The broad base of scopes however weren't 200Mhz high-end scopes, these were mostly simpler models in the 20Mhz to 60Mhz range, with generally inferior specs. A lot of them were pretty shit even when they came out, like some of the USSR made low end scopes that were sold under various names around the globe, or (as a younger example) the various analog scopes made by GW Instek, Atten and other outfits.
What that means is that even what once was a high-end analog scope has already difficulties keeping up with a somewhat decent entry-level DSO. Now imagine how much worse the other crop of analog boat anchors compare against them.
I've seen a lot of scopes throughout the decades, and even back then in the analog scope days not everything was great, and these old scopes didn't get better now that they are antiques.
In that case I probably wouldn't argue. Neither would I argue that a new Rolls Royce isn't better than a second-hand Ford Escort.
But a Ford Escort will probably get you to your destination just as well - and much better if you can't afford a Rolls Royce! That's the kind of balance and nuance missing from your statements.
Just that the equivalent to the analog scope isn't a Ford Escort, it's pretty much horse and buggy, and (like the analog scope) it lacks all technological achievements made that are available in its successor, i.e. powerful brakes, heating, crash-safe body, occupant restraining systems, rubber tires, electrical lighting, cruise control, stability and tracktion control, on-board entertainment systems, satnav, whatever (like the analog scope's lack of even the most basic measurement and analysis capabilities, or even very basic stuff like proper storage). And I'm not sure horse and buggy can generally be seen as a viable means of transport these days.
The Escort equivalent would be an earlier DSO like the HP 54500 Series, because like the Escort it can pretty much do all the basics that are expected from a car today, it just comes with inferior performance (acceleration, economy, crash performance) and lacks most of the options that are available in newer cars (ESP, ABS even depending on the model, side airbags, pre-crahs warning and so on), and it looks old.
But, and this is why car analogies are seldomly appropriate, I'm not sure a new DSOX2000 can be considered the equivalent of a Rolls Royce (that would be something like the Keysight DSO-Z or the LeCroy LabMaster, both scopes that come with a 6 digit price tag). A modern day entry level DSO is more like cars like the Skoda Fabia, VW Up or Dacia Sandero.
Anyways, I know we're unlikely to agree on this, but at the end of the day that doesn't matter. The fact is that the analog scope is dead, period. All major manufacturers have stopped producing them, most of them a long time ago (Iwatsu held on for longest due to contractual requirements to keep them available). There hasn't been any new development in analog scopes in more than two decades, and there won't be any new models coming out. It's dead, period. Reality is that the world of engineering has long moved on to DSOs, which in on way or another have more than fully replaced DSO throughout the various industries, and this isn't changed just because some few hold-outs still cling to their old boat anchors. That is how it is.
Considering that analog scopes are dead, it's silly to buy one for anything else than curiosity if you have a somewhat decent DSO already. As for the common example of the broke student/hobbyist, an analog scope can still be fine if it's free/very cheap (<$100 for better models), however, considering that older DSOs like the HP 54600 Series can often be found for a couple of hundred dollars, saving up a bit longer is in my opinion the better choice, rather than investing even an lower amount in a scope that has been obsolete 2 decades ago.