With physical control levers and knobs and whatnot, you can go by feel
once you get used to them. That doesn?t work with touchscreens; you
have to keep continually looking to see what you are touching.
Verily, in article <10s42kg$ds2m$[email protected]>, did [email protected]d deliver unto us this message:
With physical control levers and knobs and whatnot, you can go by feel
once you get used to them. That doesn?t work with touchscreens; you
have to keep continually looking to see what you are touching.
Yeah, hard buttons are better. I like being able to work my remote in
the dark.
On a related note, who thought hidden controls were a selling point?
I regard it as a warning.--- Synchronet 3.21f-Linux NewsLink 1.2
Verily, in article <10s42kg$ds2m$[email protected]>, did [email protected]d deliver unto us this message:
With physical control levers and knobs and whatnot, you can go by feel
once you get used to them. That doesn?t work with touchscreens; you
have to keep continually looking to see what you are touching.
Yeah, hard buttons are better. I like being able to work my remote in
the dark.
On a related note, who thought hidden controls were a selling point? I regard it as a warning.
| Sysop: | DaiTengu |
|---|---|
| Location: | Appleton, WI |
| Users: | 1,114 |
| Nodes: | 10 (0 / 10) |
| Uptime: | 492511:53:48 |
| Calls: | 14,267 |
| Calls today: | 3 |
| Files: | 186,320 |
| D/L today: |
26,173 files (8,479M bytes) |
| Messages: | 2,518,387 |