I think that digital is only an illusion. There aren't really ones and zeroes in a computer, but rather ranges of voltages used to represent an on/off state. For example, I found a datasheet for an i2c uart (Basically just interfaces two different kinds of serial busses) just as an example. Vdd is the supply voltage to the chip. A high input is defined as 0.7Vdd - 5.5V. Meaning 2.31V-5V for a 3.3V supply voltage. The high and low states are really just logical states given to an analog signal.
Actualy analogue has no steps, (well at least not in the world we inhabit, rather than in the quantum world). So what we have is a digital system.
Digital is not Binary. It is represented numericaly in Binary but is not intrinsically Binary in nature. Digital is the quantised representation of an analogue system. It doesn't matter how many quantisation "steps" you have it remains a digital system. A Binary sytem would be a Digital system with only two states, however CD is another Digital system, but it has 65,534 states. The modern Telephone network is also Digital, this time comprising 255 states.
Analogue is by definition infinitely variable, (again with the caveat of not living in the quantum world).
It always strikes me as a tad ironic when someone claims a thread is meaningless and bad for the forum etc etc by bumping it back to the top of the page.
In answer to the question: No. Still, I'm sure we (the large community) will find plenty wrong in whichever patch is finally released - we always do, so the idea of releasing an incomplete test patch of whatever kind, is not exactly "out there".
Life is neither digital or analog. Life is, in my opinion, base 1. There's no on/off state, atoms just exist. Their positions can't be quantized, because the universe is relative. Position of atoms is just relative to other atoms. When an atom moves, it's just moving relative to every other atom. You can't really, in my opinion, create a grid of all the atoms that line up perfectly. Anyway, there's so many divisions of atoms below that. What's the smallest particle? Quarks?
Analog is basically a way of saying "digital with as high precision as nature will allow," I suppose.