Another marketing gimmick?


Put micro sized components in a glass structure that resembles a vacuum tube?
https://agdproduction.com/index.html

Im thinking pure aesthetics were the goal here. No need to put those "advances" mosfets in a glass tube?

I guess someone will buy it.
tablejockey
Using "radar" and providing the link with the attribution shows I was just lazy. Nothing more.

Your needling every and any point to better others shows you to be an audio (and carpet) harpy of the highest order. I think you’ve found your niche.

Carry on.

All the best,
Nonoise
Post removed 
Nope. My intention was not to look knowledgeable at all. You must not think that others do things for the same reasons you do.

As for personal attacks, you just mask them (sometimes poorly) in your rebuttals, but they do show. As for mine, it's just snark, making it easy to digest, and out in the open.

All the best,
Nonoise
A quick check of electronic device history indicates the GAN transistor is far from a "new" breakthrough.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gallium_nitride

I took electronics 101 classes in the early 80's. Don't remember if Gallium was ever mentioned as an alternative material to silicon,for a semiconductor. 

What I clearly remember, is the Apple II computer was about to change EVERYTHING. That's at least, what the computer nerds kept telling me.

One instructor who was into audio, believed digital was going to blow everyone's mind, in the not too distant future. He thought vacuum tubes were stone age devices, and wrote them off.
A friend of mine was the youngest engineer at JPL at the time and he worked with Gallium nitride back then. That was in the late '70s. I don't know what the application was but he told me it was difficult and dangerous to work with.

All the best,
Nonoise