A wonderful metaphor, perfectly apt to the dangers of “knob and button glut.”
When it first came out, I bought the Logic Control unit. In some universe, it helps someone, I’m sure. Perhaps deep audio mixing. For me, it’s an expensive play/stop transport. It sits unloved to my immediate left, living in mouse envy.
But back to our off-topic topic: I also resist the tiny text in the iPad buttons, and I have no real estate left in my workstation to accommodate an iPad.
The goal is shared and self-evident: access to the greatest number of articulations in the most non-intrusive, directly intuitive way. XDAW is a meaningful contributor to that end.
Over the years, I have begrudged one point of wisdom: I don’t need to have all sounds available at all times. This truth was authenticated with Synchron Strings Pro and the even more prolific Duality Strings. Because the fact is, with XDAW you can create hundreds and hundreds of arts, but in real-world composing, it’s diminishing returns. The drop-down menu descends like a bottomless chasm, and you scroll forever, reminding yourself what your own acronyms and abbreviations meant, as the music you’re creating waits idly for you to return.
All this using the Art set you spent weeks creating to “speed your workflow.”
In the pharmaceutical industry, it is said that the difference between medicine and poison is the dosage. So let us design our templates with some moderation and not forget the endgame, which is composition.
Of course, I’m speaking to myself here.