I do wonder how much Tek, Agilent, LeCroy etc actually care about a segment of the market that's under $2,000, and why should they?
Oh, they do. For
Agilent Keysight the entry level is very important, they make good money not because the profit per scope is high but because of the numbers they shift. These scopes are also used as a vehicle to bring the name (which recently changed for a second time) out there (a problem that Tek doesn't have to the same extend), and if Keysight scopes are almost omni-present including in schools then chances are that they will be the vendor to go for new purchases.
LeCroy has had entry level scopes since the late 90's. LeCroy also saw them as a vehicle to get their name out more, but (unlike Agilent/Keysight) LeCroy never considered the low end market relevant enough to justify more serious investments. Therefore all their entry level scopes were (and still are) simple rebadge jobs. Their first one (LightRunner LP) was an Iwatsu rebadge, as was the later WaveJet 300/300A Series. Because these scopes are pretty expensive, in around 2009 LeCroy decided to also rebadge some Siglent low end scopes (sold as 'WaveAce'). While the Iwatsu rebadges were good although basic and very expensive scopes, the Siglent rebadge didn't go down that well as these scopes suffered from very embarrassing firmware problems of which many never were fixed (typical Siglent), and lead to quite a few angry customers.
Tek, well, they know that they do still have a very big advantage which is their name (HP was well known but with two subsequent name changes getting their name 'stuck' is more difficult, and LeCroy is really only a name for high end scopes), and for the last ten years or so they're milking this advantage out by flogging off outdated designs, which as Dave says is typical for a Danaher company. The only problem for Tek is that the later generation of EE's hasn't grown up with the fond memory of Tek's glory days of yesteryear, so they have to convince with their products (which at least for scopes are overwhelmingly rather poor).
In real terms accessiblity to an oscilloscope has never been so good. I know that there was no way I could justify purchasing a new scope 20 years ago at that time in my career or bearing in mind how much they cost in real terms back then. Blimey, I remember buying my own TDS2024 ten years ago for £1,800, that hurt.
Indeed. And thanks to high integration and cheap processing you get quite a lot even in a typical entry level scope like the DS1000z these days.