I saw this video and thought it would be fun to try, and would be nice to see support for 3d applications. http://youtube.com/watch?v=uw7vTGWvWCQ They are kinda expensive though. https://shop.trycelery.com/page/palettekits I could see myself maybe spending $20 per module, but $50 is definitely a bit much for a single knob…
This guy has a pretty sweet setup that had me thinking for a little while. Seems great for 2d oriented work while on cintiq, less fumbling for combo hotkeys and just straight to a single buton. But I'm not sure I like moving around that much. And have you seen the spacemouse? @Tobbo yes!
This guy has a pretty sweet setup that had me thinking for a little while. Seems great for 2d oriented work while on cintiq, less fumbling for combo hotkeys and just straight to a single buton. But I'm not sure I like moving around that much. And have you seen the spacemouse? @Tobbo yes!
If it was using Midi (and it probably isn't), something like this would be much cheaper: http://www.thomann.de/nl/korg_nanokontrol_2_black.htm They're cheap and plastic, but it's a good starter option, and there are a lot of spendier alternatives to upgrade to, including ones with motorised faders (so if something changes…
To me it's expensive when you can have an audio mixing board with similar knobs and sliders for $200 with 10 sliders and 50 knobs. Or with this 2 sliders, 3 knobs, 2 buttons for $300. I think it'd make more sense to put more than one knob/button/slider on a module. I wonder if you could some how take the inputs from a…
Yes, mass produced electronics with a bigger market end up costing less. I'm in to analogue synths, I have to pay $200 for a small board with 3 knobs on it.
That's actually not that bad of a price. If it's using midi you could probably save money by building it yourself if you're handy with electronics. An arduino would make it easy, if you need more analog inputs for knobs and sliders you could add some multiplexors.