Discussing touchscreens? Why / why not?
Discussing touchscreens? Why / why not?
................... Inspired by the "Live without a screen" thread, but at the risk of thread-jacking...
Isn't looking at parameter names (and sometimes values) on a lcd screen on, say, a Remote SL, just a few steps short of using a touchscreen?
Ok, I know, the main difference is the tactility in turning a physical rather than "pushing" a graphic, but even the Lemur lacks that.
And I know the Lemur allows u to design your own interface with only the elements u need, which I think is great, but not that great, not $HUGE greater than making do with a touchscreen.
So I guess I'm wondering why more people aren't using a touch screen?
If you are - hows that working out for u? Tips? Links?
If not, why not?
Isn't looking at parameter names (and sometimes values) on a lcd screen on, say, a Remote SL, just a few steps short of using a touchscreen?
Ok, I know, the main difference is the tactility in turning a physical rather than "pushing" a graphic, but even the Lemur lacks that.
And I know the Lemur allows u to design your own interface with only the elements u need, which I think is great, but not that great, not $HUGE greater than making do with a touchscreen.
So I guess I'm wondering why more people aren't using a touch screen?
If you are - hows that working out for u? Tips? Links?
If not, why not?
leeeeeeeeeemur
also with the lemur and live, you are pretty much on your own for interfaces.beats me wrote:Quick answer. Lemurs are too damn expensive and there really isn't anything else out there.
there are some good templates, but they never do everything you want, so
you'll have to edit/toy/create.
where as the dexter is nice if you are logic/cubase/neundo/sonar user
already.. it maps right onto those.
exactly - they're really expensive which makes wonder why one wouldn't use a touchscreen instead at the small (compared to the price difference) difference that you can't design your own interface.beats me wrote:Quick answer. Lemurs are too damn expensive and there really isn't anything else out there.
Bearing in mind it is also a plus to be able to see everything on screen and not have to decide up-front what to have and then go design/ build a max patch / whatever.
I'm not all up on computer touch screen technology but I don't know anybody that owns one or is using one for anything, much less music. I don't think it's as simple as hooking up a touch screen to your computer and you are off launching clips and doing filter sweeps with your fingers.
I don't think the technology is there otherwise a bunch of people would be doing it already. Somebody on this board has been working on this for Live for forever and I don't know what the hold up is.
I don't think the technology is there otherwise a bunch of people would be doing it already. Somebody on this board has been working on this for Live for forever and I don't know what the hold up is.
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i've got a touchscreen and it doesn't work well w/ the live controls.
works OK w/ vsts if they have big controls.
live does odd things w/ the touchscreen, it feels like the controls keep extending in a direction even if you aren't going there -- the feel just doesn't work w/ the touch-screen yet.
it might just be my screen though.
clip-fire works fine though.
it's a shame because the live controls are plenty big enough for this type of control.
works OK w/ vsts if they have big controls.
live does odd things w/ the touchscreen, it feels like the controls keep extending in a direction even if you aren't going there -- the feel just doesn't work w/ the touch-screen yet.
it might just be my screen though.
clip-fire works fine though.
it's a shame because the live controls are plenty big enough for this type of control.
If u remember who that was please let me know in this thread.beats me wrote:Somebody on this board has been working on this for Live for forever and I don't know what the hold up is.
Would I be right in thinking that the main limitation of a touchscreen compared to a Lemur would be the lack of multi-touch?
who?misteron wrote:If u remember who that was please let me know in this thread.beats me wrote:Somebody on this board has been working on this for Live for forever and I don't know what the hold up is.
Would I be right in thinking that the main limitation of a touchscreen compared to a Lemur would be the lack of multi-touch?
http://www.ableton.com/forum/profile.ph ... le&u=11888
limitation?
multitouch
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limitations: no tactile feedback. A static surface forces you to become repetitious and therefore your cellular memory kicks in and you become one with the gear = better performance. a houndred thousand dj's can't be wrong
offerings: like playing with modular synthesizers.. if you've ever done that, then you'll know what I mean. endless exploration and newness
summary: you need both. a static surface brings you back to a productive and repeatable outcome, but the analogue direction is so infinitely creative.
I think the FAW Circles synth attacks this issue well. If we see Live going touch/multi touch then the FAW synth is a good model
offerings: like playing with modular synthesizers.. if you've ever done that, then you'll know what I mean. endless exploration and newness
summary: you need both. a static surface brings you back to a productive and repeatable outcome, but the analogue direction is so infinitely creative.
I think the FAW Circles synth attacks this issue well. If we see Live going touch/multi touch then the FAW synth is a good model
MacBook Pro 2.4GHz 16GB RAM | Live 9 suite | Novation Twitch | Novation ReMote SL25 | Korg padKontrol
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yeah.. but imagine a wacom controlled with your fingers.. not one but 2 or three fingers. we need multi touch for the full evolution of software synthesis.
I have to credit the Limur.. I just wish I could afford one
I have to credit the Limur.. I just wish I could afford one
MacBook Pro 2.4GHz 16GB RAM | Live 9 suite | Novation Twitch | Novation ReMote SL25 | Korg padKontrol
Re: Discussing touchscreens? Why / why not?
GUI controls designed for the mouse don't work so well for finger manipulation. Manipulating track volume by touching a 25x100 pixels Live fader is not as practical and precise as a 100x600 pixels Lemur fader.misteron wrote:And I know the Lemur allows u to design your own interface with only the elements u need, which I think is great, but not that great, not $HUGE greater than making do with a touchscreen.
So I guess I'm wondering why more people aren't using a touch screen?
For me, the main advantage over traditional knob twiddling is the ability to control more than 2 parameters at the same time - that's all.
Sure it def. looks übercoolish to push some physics driven automationballs in one corner and fiddle some step sequencers in the other,
but all that you can do with software on your screen (ja ja, the screen:-) except the above mentioned limitation for 2 controls at the same time.
Also the lack of the physical feeling of knobs and sliders is a big downside for me. They weight, they turn, give physical response
all that i would miss when i touch an lcd with my fingers.
Maybe i'm too unfuture or search for excuses for not having 2000+ ish (
)
but lemurs are not for me.
give me my monome!
Sure it def. looks übercoolish to push some physics driven automationballs in one corner and fiddle some step sequencers in the other,
but all that you can do with software on your screen (ja ja, the screen:-) except the above mentioned limitation for 2 controls at the same time.
Also the lack of the physical feeling of knobs and sliders is a big downside for me. They weight, they turn, give physical response
all that i would miss when i touch an lcd with my fingers.
Maybe i'm too unfuture or search for excuses for not having 2000+ ish (

but lemurs are not for me.
give me my monome!
I'll leave that DJ's quote for another day, but regarding tactile feedback and the Lemur... Who said you can only use the Lemur?postmixformula wrote:limitations: no tactile feedback. A static surface forces you to become repetitious and therefore your cellular memory kicks in and you become one with the gear = better performance. a houndred thousand dj's can't be wrong
Sure, the screen doesn't feel like a knob. Thats what knobs are for.
The Lemur is a powerful centerpiece of your gear.
It all comes down to designing an interface that works for you.
That being said, the Lemur still has a lot of features missing. So doing anything you want is still out of the question.
Its still virtually impossible to easily send text to the Lemur, even though the OSC protocol is text based.
Anyway... I use the Lemur for things it isn't designed for. I don't need knobs or sliders. I need visual feedback and a control center for my physical controllers.
When the now mythical update for the Lemur arrives, you'll see some of the coolest dynamical interfaces yet. If all else fails, there's still Max 5
