I was very excited when I saw this thing pop up so figured I'd give it a try. For reference I'm not an EE, but I build guitar tube-amps for fun, so having a non-mains oscilloscope is a great thing to have and of course a multimeter is always welcome. My first impression when taking it out of the box (and the bag, which is NOT a case and will not protect the meter from anything but minor scratches) is that the meter feels cheep. I handed it to my non-technical (but adorable) wife who commented without asking that, \"it feels like a toy\". One drop on a tile or cement floor and I imagine this thing is toast. This ain't no Fluke, but then a Fluke scope meter starts at $2000 so that's not a fair comparison. As a meter, it's fairly intuitive if you ever used a multimeter before. The dial sets your mode and you have different lead connections for high-amp current testing and for capacitor testing. No issues there. The readout is a bit unique with all of the main readout numbers being hollow and that seems like an odd \"form over function\" choice to me - make the numbers bold and obvious! For simple measurements this thing does the job, but then so does a $10 multimeter. How about the scope? The scope works. I hooked it up to my Agilent arbitrary waveform generator that has absolutely not been calibrated in probably 20 years, but that's not important because I'm not building satellites. That's when I hit the first snag. How do you enable the scope? There is no scope button, and absolutely no obvious way to start the scope, so I did what any man would do as a last ditch effort to get something working: I checked the manual. Ahh - hold down the R button for two seconds. Um. OK... now there's a scope. I set the Agilent and looked at the screen and saw a very tiny trace. How do I set the scale? No idea. How do I set the voltage range? No idea. How do I set it to auto? No idea. Oh wait - there are four function buttons and one of them is time. Nice! I am treated with three op