"I think we all appreciate how much performance and functionality you can pack into a digital design, but along with that low cost, feature-laden capability comes the baggage of software and impending component obsolescence that can doom the entire product to the landfills in a few short years." - pitts8rh
This is something I do very much worry about. Though if the hardware - including processor - is defined in a higher level language that won't soon disappear, then the portability and therefore survivability factor goes up. Just as we paw over tube Theremin schematics for clues, future Theremin designers may paw over the code to see what makes it tick.
I'm wondering if it will even be possible to build / repair a tube Theremin in 40 years or so. Almost all electronic components disappear over time, not just the digital ones (though they do seem to disappear at a faster rate). Are most tubes for sale these days (outside of guitar amp tubes) vintage surplus? If so, then that supply will dry up at some point.
"And as far as analog skills being arcane (!)..."
I was talking about tube skills there, not analog in general (of which digital is certainly a subset). I don't have any tube skills to speak of, with no plans to pick up any beyond the osmosis of reading the odd project here and there, though I can appreciate those who do. I imagine much the attraction of building a tube Theremin is to have a benchmark of sorts, to gain direct experience as to what the heck the original even was.