"I have wondered if long term they might produce 2 models of the CVox 1 full analogue and 1 full digital" - gingercat
The fully digital Cvox is called a Theremini ;-) And the negative connotation that the Theremini gave digital is perhaps why there is an analog mode in the Cvox in the first place.
They seem to be responsive to fixing the worst of the Cvox issues after the fact, but with the EW discontinued I don't get a real sense of commitment from Moog for professional grade Theremins. My feeling is that after this Cvox wave is over they'll keep making Thereminis for a while, but that's it. There's very little money in the field (the beauty part) and the product is more complex to manufacture, maintain, and support than most musical consumer items.
"As for a display - I think the idea was that you'd have the CVox connected to a tablet and wouldn't need a built in display. The app is actually really good at displaying all the settings before it crashes that is "
I don't have any problem with hooking an editor up to manage presets, or to ease the editing process. But you should be able to adjust everything in there without it. iPads and and their OSes aren't forever, apps and drivers age out, USB is a constantly moving target. Lashing a product to personal computing devices is grabbing a tiger by the tail, and Moog can barely get the editor to work on one type of device. If something almost demands that a tablet be connected, then a convenient dock should be built into the case.
My 3D printer has a small screen and a single encoder, it's awkward but it's a lot better than being required to hook it up to a PC or tablet or something. Even a one line display with a single encoder would let you enable the MIDI and such on the Cvox, and could help clarify and simplify the calibration process.