As I said, each to their ownfoosnark wrote:The interface on Kaivo didn't make me want to keep messing with it.
Just looking at the screenshot on their website (http://madronalabs.com/media/kaivo/images/Kaivo1.1.png):
- a ton of criscrossing red lines. Great. I'll just trace every one of those with my finger and try to figure out what the hell is going on... on second thought, not worth my time.
- why those color and font choices? Vague green on green. Little italic letters. Ugh.
- in the "Key" section those connecting nodes or whatever are so close together, that labels are staggered on two lines. That's not terribly intuitive to read. Yet elsewhere there seems to be plenty of space between them.
- there are little dials apparently controlling something to do with other bigger dials, but offhand I couldn't guess what.
- do the colors of the larger parameter dials mean anything? If it's just supposed to visiaully group sections together, why are some of the sequencer ones blue and some red?
- what's the big empty display for Envelope 1? Why is sustain not in line with attack/decay/release as everyone is used to?
- without reading a manual, the granulator is kind of baffling. "noise, pink to white" doesn't look anything like any granulator I've ever used, and there's not much of a clue as to how it relates to the physical model. Maybe it's less insane in practice.
- a 2D LFO looks like a clever thing, but working out how the individual X and Y values translate takes too much thought to be intuitive. (Maybe in practice it's not so bad.)
None of these things are an issue for me and I find no problems in practice.
I appear to be in a minority of one around here but Aalto and Kaivo are two synths that I want to stroke, like my very first MBP many years ago, but I can’t of course. Well, virtually maybe.
I feel inspired when I fire them up, and I certainly can't say that about the cramped and tiny interfaces of so many analog emulations. I've just sold V Collection after many years because of this very issue.



