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Free/Cheap PCB Design Tools?

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NoJo

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May 12, 2007, 4:14:06 PM5/12/07
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I'm starting up a PCB projects with some engineer colleagues -- some
signal sources that we've had cobbled up in the lab for a while. We
don't have any project funding yet, and are currently doing our proof-
of-concept work prior to looking for some funding.

Understandably, we can't use the PCB tools provided by our respective
employers (conflict of interest and all), and given that even an
affordadable design tool costs as much as a good used car, we're
looking for some pointers on shareware or really-low-cost tools.

Which ones have you found to be effective? Which design tools have you
found to be capable of real commercial projects? Which ones should I
steer away from?

Thanks in advance for your help!

larwe

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May 12, 2007, 4:20:55 PM5/12/07
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On May 12, 4:14 pm, NoJo <nolan.g.john...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Which ones have you found to be effective? Which design tools have you
> found to be capable of real commercial projects? Which ones should I
> steer away from?

EAGLE <http://www.cadsoftusa.com/>. Capable of normal commercial
usage. The free version is more than adequate for experimentation
(though the license forbids commercial use). Upgrading to the full
version is reasonably priced.

I haven't found a viable competitor in the same price bracket.

JeffM

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May 12, 2007, 4:41:49 PM5/12/07
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In message 1179000846....@e51g2000hsg.googlegroups.com
NoJo wrote:
>We don't have any project funding yet[...]

>and given that even an affordadable design tool
>costs as much as a good used car,

Ah. A question that has never before been asked.
Oh, wait.

If only there was a "Usenet Archive" that could be searched.
Oh, wait.
http://groups.google.com/groups/search?q=free+pcb-layout+gEDA+OR+KiCAD+-PCB123+-Pad2Pad&scoring=d

DJ Delorie

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May 13, 2007, 1:03:47 AM5/13/07
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JeffM <jef...@email.com> writes:
> http://groups.google.com/groups/search?q=free+pcb-layout+gEDA+OR+KiCAD+-PCB123+-Pad2Pad&scoring=d

I was going to mention gEDA, but I see you have that covered ;-)

JeffM

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May 13, 2007, 2:47:42 AM5/13/07
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Leon

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May 13, 2007, 9:11:30 AM5/13/07
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EasyPC is much easier to use and costs about the same:

http://www.numberone.com

Leon

Chris Hills

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May 13, 2007, 9:52:33 AM5/13/07
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In article <1179000846....@e51g2000hsg.googlegroups.com>, NoJo
<nolan.g...@gmail.com> writes


Try http://www.labcenter.co.uk

starts off inexpensive and is upgradable as you go. There are also
evaluation versions.

--
\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\
\/\/\/\/\ Chris Hills Staffs England /\/\/\/\/
/\/\/ ch...@phaedsys.org www.phaedsys.org \/\/\
\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/

Grant Edwards

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May 13, 2007, 11:02:28 AM5/13/07
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Costs about the same? AFAICT, it starts at 654 USD (including
the entry-level auto-router). Eagle starts at Free for
non-commercial use and 49 USD for commercial use.

[And numberon products don't seem to be available for any OS
other than MS Windows.]

--
Grant Edwards
gra...@visi.com

David Kelly

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May 13, 2007, 3:31:21 PM5/13/07
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Grant Edwards wrote:
>> EasyPC is much easier to use and costs about the same:
>>
>> http://www.numberone.com
>
> Costs about the same? AFAICT, it starts at 654 USD (including
> the entry-level auto-router). Eagle starts at Free for
> non-commercial use and 49 USD for commercial use.
>
> [And numberon products don't seem to be available for any OS
> other than MS Windows.]

The free version of McCAD tools at http://mccad.com/ is limited to a
fairly small design but still quite useful.

I like the way McCAD tools work like a Macintosh. See an object, trace
or network, grab it with the mouse and pull to move. Have not found the
same ease in traditional PC ecad tools.

PC and MacOS versions are essentially identical.

JeffM

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May 13, 2007, 9:11:09 PM5/13/07
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In message 1179000846....@e51g2000hsg.googlegroups.com
NoJo wrote:
>>>We don't have any project funding yet[...]
>>>and given that even an affordadable design tool
>>>costs as much as a good used car,
>>>
JeffM wrote:
>>Ah. A question that has never before been asked.
>>Oh, wait.
>>
>>If only there was a "Usenet Archive" that could be searched.
>>Oh, wait.
>>http://groups.google.com/groups/search?q=free+pcb-layout+gEDA+OR+KiCAD+-PCB123+-Pad2Pad&scoring=d

NoJo responded via email:
>I gotta admit, your email reads like a FARK.COM headline!
>Making myself target for sardonic wit is worth it
>for the link you included.
>Many, many thanks!

No sweat.
In the future, please respond to Usenet posts in the newsgroup.

larwe

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May 13, 2007, 9:28:07 PM5/13/07
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On May 13, 2:47 am, JeffM <jef...@email.com> wrote:
> larwe wrote:
> >http://www.cadsoftusa.com[...]
> >Upgrading to the full version is reasonably priced.
> >I haven't found a viable competitor in the same price bracket.
>
> ...if you ignore their recent foray into DRM:

That's not recent at all. I think 4 years ago? (something in that
ballpark) when I acquired my professional license for EAGLE, I read a
lot about this in the Cadsoft newsgroups - and it's pretty clear that
the vast majority of people there were using cracked copies. The error
message given is quite obscure, intentionally so.

I only use libraries and schematics I have made myself, or downloaded
from the Cadsoft ftp server. While I agree this particular issue is
very annoying, and Cadsoft could/should have handled Markus's problem
more effectively, it is still on the whole better than the other
options, which are:

1. use really mavericky open-source software with no significant peer
userbase,

2. use outrageously expensive, heavily copy-protected (dongle, GUID
lock, MAC lock, or live Internet registration verification)
proprietary software, oftentimes with inbuilt expiry dates if
"maintenance" fees are not paid, or

3. use marginally functional, utterly proprietary tools from pissant
vendors who try to lock you into using their fabrication services by
squirrelling away your design data in unreadable binary files.

Don't get me wrong - if there was an open-source tool that had the
same critical mass of users, and reasonably effective support, plus
the same features I need out of EAGLE, I would of course prefer and
recommend the open-source route for design re-readability in future
epochs, and I would quite happily reinvest whatever time it takes to
rebuild the libraries I've generated for EAGLE. Sadly, there is no
credible open-source PCB CAD package yet.

Someone needs to do for CAD what OpenOffice.org did for desktop
productivity software. Unfortunately, this someone doesn't have any
time to work on such a project.

JeffM

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May 13, 2007, 10:51:43 PM5/13/07
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larwe wrote:
>>>http://www.cadsoftusa.com[...]
>>>I haven't found a viable competitor in the same price bracket.
>>>
JeffM wrote:
>>...if you ignore their recent foray into DRM:
>>http://groups.google.com/group/comp.arch.embedded/browse_frm/thread/f794e82d26b59e18/d7cf4149edb93ac7?q=*-*-website+reuse+paying.*+*-I-will-switch+cracked-*+*.would.not.help.*+zzz+after-*-*-version-*+copied+*.*.unlock.*.designs+*-*-*-*-exchange-*-*-*-*-third-party+reused+qq+*-*-single-bit-*-*-*-*+useless+*-*-*-projects-could-no-longer-be-opened

>>
larwe wrote:
>I read a lot about this in the Cadsoft newsgroups - and it's pretty clear
>that the vast majority of people there were using cracked copies.
>
Evades the point.
Markus said he was FULLY LICENSED--and still got spit on.

>Cadsoft could/should have handled Markus's problem more effectively
>

THAT is the point.
Punishing someone for the misdeeds of another someone
is a really LOUSY business model.

Cadsoft's not flagging a cracked component
WHEN AN ATTEMPT IS MADE TO INSERT IT
then **LATER** locking the legit user out of his work product
is sleezy on Cadsoft's part.

Like all DRM, it hurts the innocent legit customers the most.
Bad-mouth Open Source if you will,
but this crap doesn't happen in that realm.

larwe

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May 13, 2007, 11:11:12 PM5/13/07
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On May 13, 10:51 pm, JeffM <jef...@email.com> wrote:

> Like all DRM, it hurts the innocent legit customers the most.

I wouldn't really classify this as DRM, because it doesn't protect the
IP in the file at all.

What it appears to boil down to is that when you save a file from
EAGLE, be it a component, a schematic or a PCB layout, the serial# of
your copy (or more likely a hash) is embedded in it. There isn't
really a crack per se for the 4.0x EAGLE versions; there's simply a
widely-circulated serial number/installation key. 4.1x EAGLE versions
recognize that key and won't load files that contain it. [Actually I
thought the flag date for this issue was 3.xx to 4.0x but it was so
long ago I'm probably misremembering].

Older versions of EAGLE didn't know to look for this blacklisted
serial number. Therefore they don't complain when loading files
containing "crackomatic" components. So you can continue to work on
"poisoned" designs using the old version. It's only newer versions
that have a problem.

For some time, Cadsoft was helping people out with this problem - they
have some kind of stripper/converter there. I don't know the specifics
of Markus' case, but it seems unusually unhelpful of them. I haven't
dealt with the European arm of the operation, only the Florida-based
US distrib - if that makes any difference.

> Bad-mouth Open Source if you will,

I did exactly the opposite, if you'd care to read my post again. It
is /always/ my policy to use open-source software wherever possible,
for a variety of reasons - mostly the need to be able to access my
data again in ten years' time.

> but this crap doesn't happen in that realm.

Unfortunately, in this particular space there is no viable open source
product.

larwe

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May 13, 2007, 11:13:56 PM5/13/07
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On May 13, 10:51 pm, JeffM <jef...@email.com> wrote:


> >I read a lot about this in the Cadsoft newsgroups - and it's pretty clear
> >that the vast majority of people there were using cracked copies.
>
> Evades the point.

By the way, speaking of evading the point - I notice you handily
snipped my summary of the alternatives. No matter how evil this
particular case might be, it still appears to me to be the least of
four evils.

Stef Mientki

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May 14, 2007, 7:24:16 AM5/14/07
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Kicad (open source)
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