well I think you are being prejudiced in your view and run the risk of allowing that to be deceiving you if you do not consider the 5D and such precision tools
I don't think so. I've had many chances to use the Nikon D3, Canon 5D and others. Too many knobs, too deep menus, manuals thick as a bible if printed.
Sure, a lightmeter is driven by electronics, but nothing I'd consider being a gadget because it serves just one single purpose: metering the light. On the opposite a digicam has some 59 metering spots (which one to choose?), several AF points (always using the one I don't want to use), the knobs and wheels are too tiny for my hands and fingers, I can't read the menu without my glasses (but I can feel the clicks of the aperture ring and exposure time know of my 35mm cameras, so working without glasses is second nature).
Just today I could use a Panasonic Lumix LX3. Great camera, really, but the buttons are made for baby fingers! Even my tiny Minox 35 GT is better to use, no menu, nada. Delivering more than 20 MegaPixels - a 'full frame sensor'

. Loaded with a Provia 100 F or Astia 100 and the slides scanned with the Nikon the images feature a better resolution, better colors, tonal range. OK, the Minox doesn't have a Zoom, my Rollei 35s doesn't have a zoom (fun cameras), but hey, my legs and feet are in good shape, so what the heck...
My Nikon F4s and FE2 with MD-12 do what I want them to do. No sensor hassle with dirt, dust, dead pixels. No AF either. The slides are - obviously - sharper and even better than those shot with a Minox.
Not to mention my Fuji Pros, the Arca Swiss - not hundreds of manual pages, just unpack and use them. Aperture, exposure time, focus - that's it.
The only drawback: the turnaround of the E-6 lab.
But let's stop here, it doesn't make sense if you don't need the perfect prime lens or perfect images with easy archiving features.
A 3Dx is around 6.000 for the body only and doesn't deliver better results than my current cameras. So why should I trash money and value as well as the haptical experience and know how for a new camera that will be outdated in one year or even less?
That is all techie stuff, I know, but it's part of my business. Nothing is worse than having a shot I can't enlarge to meet the customer requirements if he should change his mind a week later. Digital results are still too small, and digital will have a long way to go before I'd switch.