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Cool modular controller at NAMM

Check these out

It's like a pressure sensitive mouse pad, and you can swap those magnetic overlays. It's rather nice and it goes well with the ipad in a bag or something.

Glad I didn't pick up the XKey air cuz these look nice.

Comments

  • Ozzy Osbourne harmonicas. Holy shit. But honestly, every single product in this video (with the exception of the Akai) is kind of a ridiculous thing that a designer would imagine a musician would want. But doesn't want. An amethyst guitar? A super-quiet acoustic guitar that you use headphones for?? Why, why why?

  • But the Amethyst and Tigers Eye guitars sure were purdy.....

  • @BiancaNeve said:
    But the Amethyst and Tigers Eye guitars sure were purdy.....

    hahaha
    SHINY THINGS!
    I've never actually been to a convention, and my only frame of reference is the last episodes of Season One of "Silicon Valley."

  • That Sensel pad looked interesting, depending on the price. There have been a whole load of developments recently into interfaces which allow more expressive performance, and that is a hugely welcome thing in my book!

  • edited January 2017

    @PhilW said:
    That Sensel pad looked interesting, depending on the price. There have been a whole load of developments recently into interfaces which allow more expressive performance, and that is a hugely welcome thing in my book!

    Around $250 with one overlay or $300 with three.

  • edited January 2017

    @alecsbuga said:
    Check these out

    It's like a pressure sensitive mouse pad, and you can swap those magnetic overlays. It's rather nice and it goes well with the ipad in a bag or something.

    Glad I didn't pick up the XKey air cuz these look nice.

    The Sensel controller sure reminded me a lot of the Joué.

    https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1556263559/joue

    The most significant differences I could see were the Sensel's electronics being along the top instead of the side like on the Joué', making the Sensel's form factor overall larger and more square than the Joué's, and the Sensel's light flashing indicators on pad recognition.

    Apparently the Sensel also began life on Kickstarter, in 2015.

    https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1152958674/the-sensel-morph-interaction-evolved

    Apparently Sensel are American whilst the Joué makers are French, I really like how two Sensel Morph devices can be simply used as one large one by positioning them to touch at their sides.

    https://the-sensel-morph-interaction-evolved.backerkit.com/hosted_preorders

    EDIT: Disclaimer, I backed the Joué project.

  • My daughter sent me a link to the Sensel - it can also function as an art tablet. The demos showed using a pencil and an actual paint brush which was quite cool. Not to mention a qwerty keyboard overlay as well.

  • That Sensel is cool, but it looks like the overlays are two dimensional. If memory serves, don't the Joue overlays have some texture to make them 3-D? That is, I thought the pads had a little dimension to them to make them feel more pad-like?

  • @lukesleepwalker said:
    That Sensel is cool, but it looks like the overlays are two dimensional. If memory serves, don't the Joue overlays have some texture to make them 3-D? That is, I thought the pads had a little dimension to them to make them feel more pad-like?

    You remember correctly, the Joue uses silicon overlays. I find the biggest difference between iOS apps and hardware or instruments is that you almost always have to look at the screen while playing and can't rely on touch.

  • @wigglelights said:
    My daughter sent me a link to the Sensel - it can also function as an art tablet. The demos showed using a pencil and an actual paint brush which was quite cool. Not to mention a qwerty keyboard overlay as well.

    .

    @InfoCheck said:

    @lukesleepwalker said:
    That Sensel is cool, but it looks like the overlays are two dimensional. If memory serves, don't the Joue overlays have some texture to make them 3-D? That is, I thought the pads had a little dimension to them to make them feel more pad-like?

    You remember correctly, the Joue uses silicon overlays. I find the biggest difference between iOS apps and hardware or instruments is that you almost always have to look at the screen while playing and can't rely on touch.

    I feel pretty confident that the tech behind the Joué can support fine art tools as well, and its audio-centric presentation may reflect more on the individual creators than on the limits of their tech.

    At least, I hope.

    An X-Y controller doubling as an art tablet sounds (haha see what I did there) awesome. :)

  • Wow that's pretty cool. Don't need it, cant afford it but I need it right now lol!

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