On Sat, Feb 09, 2013 at 12:03:41PM +0300, Louigi Verona wrote: > On Sat, Feb 9, 2013 at 2:29 AM, John Rigg <lad...@jrigg.co.uk> wrote: > > To be fair I wasn't really slagging off Windows and Mac users. Most pro > > audio > > engineers are using those after all. I'm just bemused by the attitude that > > audio processing tools should be anything more than that. Pretty pictures > > and dumbed down control ranges don't help me make better mixes, they just > > get in my way. > > > But why instantly "dumbed down"? Or are the generic LADSPA controls so > intellectual? > I think beautifully down interface adds to the inspiration as opposed to > stuff > that all looks like coding examples.
By "dumbed down" I mean restricted in a way which may result in inexperienced users making fewer mistakes, but will also inconvenience more advanced users. An example of this would be a high mid EQ that won't sweep above 8kHz. What if I need to EQ 12kHz? There's some excuse for this kind of thing on analogue hardware, as component cost has to be kept down, but in a plugin it's totally unnecessary. Another pet peeve is lack of a text entry field on controls, as it makes it difficult to set a parameter to an exact amount. Even worse are detented controls. What if I need an intermediate setting? The reason for detents on analogue hardware is for repeatability of settings, but it's totally redundant in software, unless the developer has neglected to provide text entry! I will stress that I'm talking about audio engineering tools, not music creation software here. I do appreciate that users of the latter have very different requirements. John _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-dev mailing list Linux-audio-dev@lists.linuxaudio.org http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-dev