Phil wrote:
You should have your own library and only import a part into it
after checking and fixing it.
> The real issue for me is the availability of libraries though I agreeOf high importance is the ease of creating new libraries and parts.
> that schematic capture/edit is a deal breaker. I kind of just assume
> that any reasonable system will have a decent one. I like eagle
> because there are a lot of libraries free for the using and the lib
> editor is reasonably capable (though cumbersome to use).
>
> If I were trying to push a new system, I'd have a gazillion libraries
> out there to make it trivially easy to get going. Also, I'd have a
> bunch of predefined symbols (packages, schematic symbols) that I
> could use to quickly add a new part. There is nothing more
> discouraging than to start a design and discover that you need to
> create all sorts of new parts completely from scratch. A 15 minute
> job becomes hours of tedium in looking up layouts and so on.
You should have your own library and only import a part into it
after checking and fixing it.
> Actually, if it were me, I'd figure out to import other systems
> libraries. heh heh....
>
> --- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, Russell Shaw <rjshaw@n...>
> wrote:
>
>>Stefan Trethan wrote:
>>
>>>>Anything that's not open source is not yours whatever you pay. If
>>>>the vendor disappears, you're on borrowed time.
>>>>
>>>Any open sorce pcb software out there?
>>
>>"pcb" for linux. I haven't used it, because there's no matching
>>schematic editor i like.
>