Michael Aivaliotis Posted April 28, 2016 Author Report Share Posted April 28, 2016 6 hours ago, ShaunR said: Do you have stats for sign-ups over time like you have shown for posts? The stats on this can't be relied upon because there is an issue with fake accounts. So this may be showing the latest wave of spammers rather than real user interest. Quote Link to comment
Michael Aivaliotis Posted April 28, 2016 Author Report Share Posted April 28, 2016 1 hour ago, CopperD said: I have been waiting for this "fundamental redesign" and it doesn't look like it's coming out this year. If you follow and read this Blog. You will see NI discussing all the areas they are investing in for the future of LabVIEW. Interspersed with marketing BS. But the info is there. https://decibel.ni.com/content/blogs/labview-news-english/ 1 Quote Link to comment
Rolf Kalbermatter Posted April 29, 2016 Report Share Posted April 29, 2016 (edited) 13 hours ago, Michael Aivaliotis said: The stats on this can't be relied upon because there is an issue with fake accounts. So this may be showing the latest wave of spammers rather than real user interest. Wow that graph certainly looks not very logical. There is absolutely nothing in the LabVIEW world which would explain the huge activity increase in 2011 and 2013. And your suspicion of spam activity probably is founded. Seems like somewhere in 2012 someone started to do some tests to launch a huge spam attack (most likely to many other foras too) in 2013 and then towards the end of the year ramped up in one last huge effort to try to make it a success and killing the "business model" definitely with that. The interesting data is likely more in the baseline where you can see that a somewhat steady number dropped to virtually 0 after the first spam attack and is nowadays just barely above 0 which would be indeed significantly lower than at the start of the graph in 2010. Edited April 29, 2016 by rolfk Quote Link to comment
Michael Aivaliotis Posted April 29, 2016 Author Report Share Posted April 29, 2016 Actually, that blip at the end is due to the new forum layout. I think it's better understood now, how to create an account in the new layout. Onboarding is easier now. Or it could be a new wave of spammers... Quote Link to comment
CopperD Posted April 29, 2016 Report Share Posted April 29, 2016 21 hours ago, Michael Aivaliotis said: If you follow and read this Blog. You will see NI discussing all the areas they are investing in for the future of LabVIEW. Interspersed with marketing BS. But the info is there. https://decibel.ni.com/content/blogs/labview-news-english/ Thank you for this it looks like some good tidbits are in there. I would say it is slathered in marketing BS. Sadly marketing has stuck its fat ugly hand into LabVIEW very deeply and we'll need some sort of proctologist to remove it. 2 Quote Link to comment
Wire Warrior Posted May 6, 2016 Report Share Posted May 6, 2016 (edited) For me personally, I started doing a lot more development with TestStand when I started my new job 2 years ago. Since I had zero TestStand experience most of my time/energy has been spent coming up to speed on TestStand so I was over at the NI forums for that. My need for advanced LabVIEW topics has been very small and my need to pose a question that has yet to be asked is even smaller. I have found that my questions have already been asked by someone else in the past so the need to create a new topic is far less than before. That does bring to mind a thought...search engines have become much more better over the last few years and on top of that people have become better at forming queries for search engines too. Perhaps we see less new topics been created because the existing one's answer the questions sufficiently and the users can use that to answer the question. Can you get a plot of # of views of a topic? Or maybe updates to old topics? I also love LAVAG for my LabVIEW questions. I want it to stay. Answering the specific question posed, the only other space (other than NI.com) for LabVIEW content is the LabVIEW Maker Hub (https://www.labviewmakerhub.com/). Its less Q&A for issues and more neat projects type of stuff. In my personal time I find myself spending more time with the Raspberry Pi and Arduino related forums because it's relevant to the toys I am using. Edited May 6, 2016 by Wire Warrior 1 Quote Link to comment
Popular Post MarkCG Posted May 6, 2016 Popular Post Report Share Posted May 6, 2016 LabVIEW is not dead yet but it definitely feels like it's getting ready to move to retirement community. I am skeptical that the redesign that comes out in the future will do anything to reverse the trend. I also just think that the closed and proprietary nature of LabVIEW will grow into a heavier and heavier millstone around its neck. You can argue all you want about how in certain situations LabVIEW can save money by reducing development time and increasing productivity. The thing is IME people don't think in those terms. However irrational it is, in my experience it seems that people would rather spend man-hours than dollars, as the man-hours are already paid for and more or less "free" from the manager's point of view. LabVIEW will hang on in certain niches and legacy systems but the dream of "LabVIEW everywhere" to me seems dead. 3 Quote Link to comment
Benoit Posted May 7, 2016 Report Share Posted May 7, 2016 In my point of view, The fact that Ni sell a home version might help a little bit. But this version will bring a lot's of new questions. If Lavag.org can reach this market, We might have a lot more people visit this website. Personally, i love it and the answer given by people here is more relevant than what is found on NI.com. 3 hours of reasearch on Ni.com to find a simple answer is not a good solution for me. Here the question are quickly answered and no insult are sent to no one. Lavag.org is a family... if we found the family to small, we just need to reach a new market and do some advertisement for it. Benoit Quote Link to comment
Francois Normandin Posted May 7, 2016 Report Share Posted May 7, 2016 NI has been stabilizing LabVIEW for many releases now, and has been mainly focused on performance and reliability. Speaking for myself, the absence of cool new language features or redefinition of the IDE and work flows are the main reasons I've been mostly inactive from LAVAG over the past few years. Once I've gone around the garden and experienced most of the things I am personally atuned to, I find it harder to keep an interest in the daily chatter that happens. I hope I'd get a renewed interest if I found a new topic that piqued my interest, but it might be wishful thinking. When on LAVAG, I kind of feel like I'm sitting in my favorite café: the discussions are background noise and I can't possibly follow them all, but they contribute to me feeling that I belong. It's comfortable. It's cozy. I like to sit next to familiar faces. If the ambiant noise is lower than before, it might simply be a realization that we've grown up as a community to the point where not everything needs to be said. Hey, LAVAG might be like an old couple that just takes comfort in the presence of the other, who knows. 1 Quote Link to comment
Popular Post ShaunR Posted May 7, 2016 Popular Post Report Share Posted May 7, 2016 2 hours ago, Francois Normandin said: NI has been stabilizing LabVIEW for many releases now, and has been mainly focused on performance and reliability. 3 Quote Link to comment
hooovahh Posted May 9, 2016 Report Share Posted May 9, 2016 On 5/7/2016 at 3:16 AM, ShaunR said: Have you used a version of LabVIEW from the past 6 years? It seems your preferred version is 2009. I've used every major version of LabVIEW between 2009 and 2015 on at least one real project, and stability has been the focus more or less for the last few years. It is far from perfect but I think the statement about stability and performance being a focus is true. I think we can agree that the focus certainly hasn't been groundbreaking new features. Quote Link to comment
Popular Post ShaunR Posted May 9, 2016 Popular Post Report Share Posted May 9, 2016 (edited) 1 hour ago, hooovahh said: Have you used a version of LabVIEW from the past 6 years? It seems your preferred version is 2009. I've used every major version of LabVIEW between 2009 and 2015 on at least one real project, and stability has been the focus more or less for the last few years. It is far from perfect but I think the statement about stability and performance being a focus is true. I think we can agree that the focus certainly hasn't been groundbreaking new features. I have access to all versions from 7 through to 2015 (32 and 64 bit as well as other platforms). Let there be no mistake. I am not calling into question LabVIEWs performance and stability - which has always been exemplary. My jocularity is that people still believe this is a valid excuse for shipping commercial software and proffering it as a feature. We have "software as a service" (SAAS) so I will coin the phrase "excuse as a feature" (EAAF) Also, to an extent, it's a case of "you have to laugh or else you would cry" to my disappointment that this myth is allowed to perpetuate when it was a single version (2011) that was supposed to be the "Stability and performance" release after the pain of 2010. I laughed then when they came out with it and I'm still laughing 5 years later (You can find it on LavaG.org) Try charging your customers for a "performance and reliability" version of your software and see how far you get Edited May 9, 2016 by ShaunR 3 Quote Link to comment
Reds Posted May 9, 2016 Report Share Posted May 9, 2016 (edited) For me, less of my time is spent hardcore coding or engineering these days. More of my time is spent doing sales, marketing and business building activities. That's just been the trajectory of my career/business recently. So now I consume a lot more sales & marketing blogs. I have seen the same sort of dynamic at work over at www.Slashdot.org. We're all a bunch of old guys having conversations about management. Finally, it seems like everyone who used to hang out over at info-labview moved over to this website when e-mail lists became passé. Thus, LavaG didn't need to "advertise" to get new users. People just migrated over to LavaG organically because the word-on-the-street was that this is where the cool people are hanging out now. I mean...just putting on my marketing hat for a second....how exactly *are* the new kids supposed to find this site anyway?? In short: We are all getting older, our jobs are changing, and there is no organic way for this site to attract new users. I never really considered the possibility that this has anything to do with the popularity of LabVIEW generally. Edited May 9, 2016 by Reds 1 Quote Link to comment
smithd Posted May 10, 2016 Report Share Posted May 10, 2016 (edited) On 4/26/2016 at 3:05 PM, Michael Aivaliotis said: So is LabVIEW just fading in popularity? Being relegated to some obscure language nobody cares about? Not too long ago someone turned me on to the indeed trends page. I don't know how useful the data is but if anyone hasn't seen it its kind of neat: http://www.indeed.com/jobtrends/q-labview.html Which looks negative, but then you compare that to other languages and..http://www.indeed.com/jobtrends/q-labview-q-python-q-java-q-C%23-q-C++.html?relative=1 In relative terms, python is a huge winner. If you add in standard labview terms you get these interesting compares:http://www.indeed.com/jobtrends/q-labview-test-measurement-q-python-test-measurement.htmlhttp://www.indeed.com/jobtrends/q-labview-instrument-q-python-instrument.html Edited May 10, 2016 by smithd 1 Quote Link to comment
ShaunR Posted May 10, 2016 Report Share Posted May 10, 2016 2 hours ago, smithd said: Not too long ago someone turned me on to the indeed trends page. I don't know how useful the data is but if anyone hasn't seen it its kind of neat: http://www.indeed.com/jobtrends/q-labview.html Which looks negative, but then you compare that to other languages and..http://www.indeed.com/jobtrends/q-labview-q-python-q-java-q-C%23-q-C++.html?relative=1 In relative terms, python is a huge winner. If you add in standard labview terms you get these interesting compares:http://www.indeed.com/jobtrends/q-labview-test-measurement-q-python-test-measurement.htmlhttp://www.indeed.com/jobtrends/q-labview-instrument-q-python-instrument.html Oooh. This is fun. http://www.indeed.com/jobtrends/q-labview-q-programming.html?relative=1 Python is far superior to PHP and IMO is why it is enjoying the attention. http://www.indeed.com/jobtrends/q-php-q-python.html?relative= Quote Link to comment
Jordan Kuehn Posted May 10, 2016 Report Share Posted May 10, 2016 19 hours ago, Reds said: I mean...just putting on my marketing hat for a second....how exactly *are* the new kids supposed to find this site anyway?? That's an interesting question. I'm not sure how I originally found Lava years ago. Probably a google search result since the NI.com search is/was terrible. Quote Link to comment
smarlow Posted June 21, 2016 Report Share Posted June 21, 2016 Google trends for "Learn Python" Google trends for "Learn LabVIEW" I agree with another poster that it feels like LabVIEW is headed for the retirement home. Probably because that is where all the expert users are heading soon. Our LV user group is full of grey-haired old folks, while the yearly Python "boot camp" is full of 10 times as many bright-eyed kiddies. It doesn't take a math genius (although most of us are) to see what is happening. How can we stop the slow demise? The answer is, we can't. Only NI can do anything about it. I'd post a list of what they can do, but they won't do it. 1 Quote Link to comment
hooovahh Posted June 21, 2016 Report Share Posted June 21, 2016 You make some good points, but I don't completely agree: 3 hours ago, smarlow said: Our LV user group is full of grey-haired old folks, while the yearly Python "boot camp" is full of 10 times as many bright-eyed kiddies. Ever been to a robotics competition? NI is pushing their stuff there for sure. Then there are the engineering colleges that offer LabVIEW courses for those that aren't CS/CE. I'm not blind to changes, but I'd hardly call it a demise, especially in my personal life in the surrounding job market where I got 3 job offers in the last 3 weeks, and I'm not talking about random Linkedin recruiter messages. 1 Quote Link to comment
ShaunR Posted June 21, 2016 Report Share Posted June 21, 2016 (edited) 3 hours ago, smarlow said: Google trends for "Learn Python" Google trends for "Learn LabVIEW" I agree with another poster that it feels like LabVIEW is headed for the retirement home. Probably because that is where all the expert users are heading soon. Our LV user group is full of grey-haired old folks, while the yearly Python "boot camp" is full of 10 times as many bright-eyed kiddies. It doesn't take a math genius (although most of us are) to see what is happening. How can we stop the slow demise? The answer is, we can't. Only NI can do anything about it. I'd post a list of what they can do, but they won't do it. Hey. What about us old baldies? There is little correlation between LabVIEW and Python (unlike PHP) The boom in "software as a service" is the main driver behind this uptake. Outside of this domain, Python is a poor choice and is nothing without its C/C++ bindings. Edited June 21, 2016 by ShaunR Quote Link to comment
Tim_S Posted June 21, 2016 Report Share Posted June 21, 2016 3 hours ago, smarlow said: I agree with another poster that it feels like LabVIEW is headed for the retirement home. Probably because that is where all the expert users are heading soon. Our LV user group is full of grey-haired old folks, while the yearly Python "boot camp" is full of 10 times as many bright-eyed kiddies. From what I'm seeing working for a supplier to the automotive industry, the population of engineers is mostly "grey-haired old folks". That's in the supplier and customer side. There is a massive wealth of knowledge and experience that has started to retire. Python has its strong points. Collecting and analyzing data, or time to market for custom test equipment isn't among them. These are LabVIEW's strengths because that's what the language was designed around. Quote Link to comment
smarlow Posted June 23, 2016 Report Share Posted June 23, 2016 On 6/21/2016 at 11:18 AM, Tim_S said: From what I'm seeing working for a supplier to the automotive industry, the population of engineers is mostly "grey-haired old folks". That's in the supplier and customer side. There is a massive wealth of knowledge and experience that has started to retire. Python has its strong points. Collecting and analyzing data, or time to market for custom test equipment isn't among them. These are LabVIEW's strengths because that's what the language was designed around. On 6/21/2016 at 11:09 AM, ShaunR said: Hey. What about us old baldies? There is little correlation between LabVIEW and Python (unlike PHP) The boom in "software as a service" is the main driver behind this uptake. Outside of this domain, Python is a poor choice and is nothing without its C/C++ bindings. Yes, I agree. But the younger generation doesn't seem to care much what it was designed for, and new libraries and bindings are appearing all the time to do all sorts of things. That is the point I was trying to make. The young folks like it because it is free to install and use. Never mind that it is a poor choice for the type of work LabVIEW is designed for, or that the true cost of it shows up later trying to get all the libraries to do something useful. The first time I saw Python and played around with it, I thought to myself "well this is a giant leap backward into the past", or "a command line interpreter? Are you kidding". I felt like it was 1982 and I was writing a gwbasic program with edline. I was impressed by its ability to dynamically reshape complex data types and large amounts of data, but other than that it looked like a big pile of crap to me. Again, the kids don't seem to care, nor do they mind spending hours trying get that pile of stuff working together as a unified development system of some sort. At least that is what I am seeing where I work. It has already almost completely obliterated Matlab here. All it is going to take is for someone to create a distribution that is specifically designed for data acquisition. There are examples: https://github.com/Argonne-National-Laboratory/PyGMI, and the Qwt library is specifically designed for control/dynamic plotting. I found a pretty good youtube video that explains what is available, and the work being done in that area: Quote Link to comment
Phillip Brooks Posted June 23, 2016 Report Share Posted June 23, 2016 (edited) I remember reading about a VISA Python library a couple of years ago. Might make traditional instruments easier to interface to... https://pypi.python.org/pypi/PyVISA ( edit: Looked at PyGMI and it uses PyVISA and PySerial ) Edited June 23, 2016 by Phillip Brooks Quote Link to comment
ShaunR Posted June 23, 2016 Report Share Posted June 23, 2016 1 hour ago, smarlow said: Yes, I agree. But the younger generation doesn't seem to care much what it was designed for, and new libraries and bindings are appearing all the time to do all sorts of things. That is the point I was trying to make. The young folks like it because it is free to install and use. Never mind that it is a poor choice for the type of work LabVIEW is designed for, or that the true cost of it shows up later trying to get all the libraries to do something useful. The first time I saw Python and played around with it, I thought to myself "well this is a giant leap backward into the past", or "a command line interpreter? Are you kidding". I felt like it was 1982 and I was writing a gwbasic program with edline. I was impressed by its ability to dynamically reshape complex data types and large amounts of data, but other than that it looked like a big pile of crap to me. Again, the kids don't seem to care, nor do they mind spending hours trying get that pile of stuff working together as a unified development system of some sort. At least that is what I am seeing where I work. It has already almost completely obliterated Matlab here. All it is going to take is for someone to create a distribution that is specifically designed for data acquisition. There are examples: https://github.com/Argonne-National-Laboratory/PyGMI, and the Qwt library is specifically designed for control/dynamic plotting. I found a pretty good youtube video that explains what is available, and the work being done in that area: Ask your "kids" what's their favourite OS. I can guarantee it is Linux. Python is the go-too tool for RPC GUIs to Linux programs and services. You've just got a lot of Linux "kids" where you work Quote Link to comment
smarlow Posted June 23, 2016 Report Share Posted June 23, 2016 8 minutes ago, ShaunR said: Ask your "kids" what's their favourite OS. I can guarantee it is Linux. Python is the go-too tool for RPC GUIs to Linux programs and services. You've just got a lot of Linux "kids" where you work There are a lot of Linux users here, that is true. But Windows still predominates by a wide margin, and the Python training bootcamp last year was mostly Windows machines and Macbooks. Quote Link to comment
Jordan Kuehn Posted June 23, 2016 Report Share Posted June 23, 2016 LabVIEW has been marketed as a complete language since at least 2009. It should be able to stand up to python and such. That said, it's not just NI that is responsible for driving acceptance of the language and moving it out of the niche space. We (professionals, but definitely consultants) are a big factor in driving that as well. Initial costs to develop a system provide a lot of inertia after it is completed. Quote Link to comment
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