I mean, it's the same for me, I'm just on the software side of the company (mostly, I'd say systems because occasionally I have to borrow the PCIe packet analyzer to figure out why something isn't working).
The electronics are a thing I do as a hobby and I try my absolute hardest to ensure work and hobby resources are kept separate. Electronics is sufficiently different from my professional role that it doesn't feel draining as a thing to do on the side. I'm not one of those "spend 8 hours programming/architecting/designing at work only to go home and spend another 6 writing code for fun" kind of people. I definitely write software and learn at home from time to time, but the motivation for doing it on the side is certainly less than it was before I turned it into a full time job. So I tend to gravitate towards things that are interesting to me but not necessarily useful to others.
The electronics are a thing I do as a hobby and I try my absolute hardest to ensure work and hobby resources are kept separate. Electronics is sufficiently different from my professional role that it doesn't feel draining as a thing to do on the side. I'm not one of those "spend 8 hours programming/architecting/designing at work only to go home and spend another 6 writing code for fun" kind of people. I definitely write software and learn at home from time to time, but the motivation for doing it on the side is certainly less than it was before I turned it into a full time job. So I tend to gravitate towards things that are interesting to me but not necessarily useful to others.