-----Original Messages----- > > For example, if there are 5 > interesting but arcane functions that are rarely used on a module > that crowd the one often used function, making it hard to find within > the grid of identical knobs, the module is compromised. >But this implies that you have to get people to agree on which functions are arcane and which aren't. It has been shown that it is difficult to form a consensus of opinion even when all of the functions have equal importance, e.g., the layout of the filter bank's knobs. I submit that it would be even more difficult to get people to agree on which functions in a given module are more important than others. .... I would only jump in here to say that, you're right---a consensus on "importance" is impossible. I may not even feel the same way one day to the next; why should any two people agree? So there's a certain 'democracy' in the strict uniformity we currently have. And democracy is good. We can agree on that, no? It's pretty good. As Churchill once said, and I think it applies to this particular topic on this list, with a snicker, "The only thing worse than democracy is... everything else." (At least I think it was Churchill.) But if one WERE to go with two or more knob sizes, I think you could assign a hierarchical value to how "fine" a control needs to be with some degree of consensus, and leave the marginal decisions to available panel real estate and precedence. What the larger or smaller radius of a knob gives you is more or less angular control over the pot, as well as a visual hierarchy displaying "critical-ness." Anything involving initial frequency settings should probably use a large knob. Control of, say, modulation depth is probably less finicky and could use a smaller knob. Although I could get in trouble for even saying that, because someone may violently disagree, and be someone who created a whole career on the fine control of modulation depth. It could happen. Did you ever see the mondo knob on an old Moog [/Bode] Frequency Shifter? With that big fat calibration ring around it? Man, that knob just screams to be turned, slowly, deliberately, like a safecracker would spin tumblers, listening.... Not every knob in a system needs to be that way. But one or two spices things up, visually. Is it worth opening that can of worms for that small pleasure? Who knows; maybe not. I'm just floating around in my comments here, not preaching in any way. Not today. But some days you have your soldering iron in hand and you are in "Engineering Mode." Black panels, white Helvetica-like lettering. Chrome hexagonal jacks. Uniform knobs. Good. There is order in the universe. Other days you may be in Zen artist mode. You go into your studio---mine has jet black carpeting (impossible to keep clean with a cat, 2 kids, and lots of crunchy snacks around, mind you) and dove gray walls and pearl ceiling, a scheme that I chose because I can set up indirect colored lights to set a mood. Often, it's a couple of blue floods behind some of the furniture. On these evenings, I approach my synthesizer as if it were a Japanese rock garden. I'm not in engineering mode; I'm not even trying to accomplish anything. I just sit down in the near-darkness and look at the machine. What is it saying to me? That beautiful beast. What should I do? What should I touch first? Maybe I just sit a while and then leave. I still enjoyed my modular. On these evenings, all of the discussions of grids, order, even price are meaningless. I just want this monolith to have personality, to nudge me without moving. I want symmetry, and asymmetry; I want something organic. Static tension, dynamic composition. So how would rearranging the MOTM grid accomplish this? Who knows, maybe it won't. I SAID I was being 'Zen,' today! All of the stuff we discussed about the grids, labeling, dividers, colors, etc. are absolutely important... _sometimes_. Other times it's not. One thing's for sure: it would add another dimension to the ongoing layout arguments! For those who enjoy that idea, it's a good thing; for others, it's a concept to be avoided like the plague. Now that you all think I'm nuts, please go out and buy a couple of blue lights for your studio. You'll see, you'll see.
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Re: User Interface design - Zen Commentary, no conclusion, probab ly not helpful at all...
2002-08-12 by Tkacs, Ken
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