I sometimes hear hams claim that our efforts to build simple direct conversion receivers are "very relevant" to modern technology and are "directly applicable" to today's communications techniques. These hams will say that direct conversion receivers are at the heart of modern rigs.
That's a nice thought, and it might have been true in the past, but I don't think it is true anymore.
I think the future is what you see written on the black box (!) that encloses the receiver in the above video: "DIRECT SAMPLING RECEIVER." In the recent past we did have two direct conversion receivers in the front end of SDR receiving systems. These receivers produced I and Q signals that were fed into the computer (often via the sound card). That was nice.
But the writing has been on the wall for a long time. There is no longer a need for all that direct conversion and I and Q. Just put a fast Analog-to-Digital converter chip at the front end, convert the entire HF spectrum to a digital stream, and send that stream to your computer. Or to another part of your "rig." As in the ubiquitous 7300.
I don't mean to be a Luddite here. That big waterfall is very nice. The receiver sounds great. But I am a homebrewer and I prefer to build my own gear. Ordering this black box on my phone, having it delivered by Bezos to my front step, and then updating the driver, is not what I consider homebrew radio.
A couple of things I spotted: The Si5351 chip in the box -- at least one part was recognizable. And the completely vertical skirts on all the SSB signals -- lots of 7300s out there.
Hey, to each his own, YMMV, whatever floats your boat. Just don't kid yourself into thinking that our beloved DC receivers are still somehow being used in these modern black boxes.