Dexus wrote:
It should be made idiot proof easier to understand/do then.
Well, the problem I see with the existing offset wizard is that the "calibration" process still relies heavily on personal judgement.
I mean what are the user to do with the existing wizard? Align a "fat" bar to match a thin centreline? The error in doing that is already quite significant, not to mention that some poor 1st time user who randoms a 200bpm song while calibrating, not knowing that he could've chosen a slower song to make his life easier.
I see many opportunity to improve the existing offset wizard (if the devs can afford to invest effort into it):
- Change the approaching "bars" into thin lines (similar weight to the centre line), but keep a different colour from the centreline.
- Always load a standard song with low bpm for calibration (eg 60 bpm).
- Have options to increase/lower the "approach rate" of the lines.
- If possible, can we have a "zoomed" portion of the centreline that "freezes" when every 4th metronome beat is played? (ie for a 60bpm song, the frozen portion is updated every 4s) This should make it easier to visualise the offset.
The tapping idea in the OP may be good for setting bpm, but IMO it still involves too much personal judgement for calibrating the offset. It could be simplified, however, to give indication only on whether the tap is Early or Late. This can compliment the "improved" wizard as a testing tool after calibration, ie if the user gets roughly 50/50 Early/Late it means that the calibration is more or less satisfactory.