Those doted lines are just rulers for measurements. It ain't that precise but it gives a rough idea. That's already the deluxe version when it comes to the older oscilloscopes
And it has nothing to do with Fourier, it is just a voltage pulse. Nothing special really, except for the frequency and the steepness.
Consists of 3 transistors and 4 resistors. Nothing else. It's kinda old school and elegant
Hard to appreciate when you're not into the subject, I guess.
Yes, there is actually a certain elegance to a nice equation, to a nice pcb, an nice circuitry... Probably very hard to appreciate for"normal" folks though, I understand that.
It just feels good to get an elegant solution to a non-trivial challenge (never problems, there are only challenges
) with a few cheap standard parts.
I am surprised how many people actually came into contact with electronics in a proper and not just by PC gaming or touching the smartphone
I always thought that it's rare. I'm curious what you guys actually did in those school lectures about electronics. How deep did it go? Did you go past the flashing LED?
Fredom said something about programming a microcontroller... which one? And which language are you using? Which kind of programs did you run? How much actual background is taught on programming itself? How much details are done on the hardware of a microcontroller? VHDL? Assembler?
If someone is actually answering those questions, it would be nice to know the nationality and how long it's ago...