Some of Analog's still rock. I used this chip a few years ago and its datasheet kicked total ass. https://www.analog.com/en/products/ad9739.html
And yes, that /is/ a 2.5 GSPS 14 bit DAC. :D
@zetasyanthis what is even the use case for that
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Lots of things. DOCSIS to your cable modem, for one. Cell towers, satalite communications, etc...
Can run it in 1st, 2nd, or 3rd nyquist, too, and get out usable signals to 3.75GHz with the right filters.
If you need a fast ADC to receive on one end you need a fast DAC on the other end to transmit. :P
@zetasyanthis I'm thinking of ADCs for oscilloscopes, not for receiving transmitted data
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@zetasyanthis we're a test engineer, we don't work with *functional systems*!
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So am I believe it or not. I just test very different things (servers nowadays, actually). XD
@zetasyanthis speaking of, did you see our thread on hotspotting the other day? Seems like stuff you'd find interesting
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I did not! Link?
That is absolutely fucking wild. I did not know those crystals could be made to that. XD
Also, now I have to tell you that one of the power supplies at my second internship was named the 'tracebreaker' for similar reasons. You took boards with a short, and it would find them for you, ideally with the thermal camera, but it was a 30A linear job... :P
Bonus: I once had a board it couldn't find the problem with! Turns out the PCB and assembly house both fucked up and managed to skip e-test on a set of boards. This one had one corner under a large connector just... not etched. Confused the hell out of us until I hacked the thing off to find out what was under it.
@zetasyanthis while we were trying to figure out how to use the hotspotting technique with liquid crystal, we thought we'd killed a die when we saw smoke coming up from it... the liquid crystal went completely black over the entire surface, too. but it was working perfectly fine afterward, somehow
when cleaning up at the end of the day, it turned out that there was a perfect black rectangle in the cardboard we'd used to keep the liquid crystal from getting all over the probe station
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I do not quite follow. Was the cardboard on the die?
@zetasyanthis the die was sitting on the cardboard, so that liquid crystal spilling off the edge wouldn't get into the vacuum system (intended to hold wafers down)
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@zetasyanthis we don't really have a proper setup for working on individuated dice right now
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Microscope slide maybe?
But yeah, I get you. Those are /tiny/.
@zetasyanthis this one is pretty large, actually; it's nearly a centimeter on its long side! and like 3 mm on the short side
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@zetasyanthis some of the pads are visible without a microscope, as long as you have really good eyesight!
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