Thanks,
All these are indicative of the definitely basackward programming style that I know from my use of earlier versions of the program (which I no longer own). However, was the program itself any good?
bIz
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http://www.groovetronica.com - "The beats are ok, I suppose, but the vocals sound like the vintage jazz singers from my dad's record collection. It's not for me."
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----- Original Message -----
From: Brian
To: xl7@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, June 17, 2003 12:16 PM
Subject: [xl7] OT: MIDIQuest Rant
This is an off-topic rant about Uniquest that I posted to the usenet
a while ago. As I mention at the bottom of the post, Uniquest looks
like it is the same codebase as MIDIQuest 9.0. Therefore, a lot of
the info I put here _might_ apply to MIDIQuest 9.0 for Windows.
----
Wow. I'm a bit surprised that some software written today still
requires a degree in geek.
I received a free copy of UniQuest (editor/librarian) for one of my
synth modules, and decided to put it through its paces. The entire
experience was sour. I'm writing this to alert any potential
MIDIQuest/UniQuest customers of what they will likely have to deal
with.
Problem 1: The packaging that the CD was shipped in is so wordy,
you'd think it was a government tax instruction pamphlet. It's a tri-
fold, and the "before installation" text comes _after_ the QuickStart
text.
Problem 2: The CD doesn't have an autorun (for Windows), but rather
16 icons. Nowhere in the manual do they tell you which one to run
(it's setup.exe), but to assist you, there are 4 icons to throw you
off, including "Install", "Installation Guide - Click me FI..."
(truncated from FIRST), "Operation Manual", and "ReadMe".
Problem 3: Their AutoSensing MIDI routines are brain dead. Not only
do they require you to choose the MIDI ports first, but the manual is
wrong since you need to set the MIDI port _twice_ on the same dialog.
Oh, and did I mention MIDI In and Out each have a separate dialog?
Problem 4: The online manual for UniQuest is 128 pages. The manual
for the synth I'm using with UniQuest has a 41 page manual. I guess
you pay additional $ for additional confusion.
Problem 5: The installer tried to put UniQuest four subdirectories
deep inside Program Files. As if it wasn't hidden enough...
Problem 6: By far the worst thing I've seen in a few months in a
software product was a menu option called Utilities..Uninstall
Preparation. They actually require you to select this before doing an
uninstall, otherwise your registry will be filled with junk that will
never go away. Oh, you'd have to read the UniQuest manual to learn
about it (it's on page 106).
While I can't confirm, I looked through the registry after their
uninstaller was done and found a few references to "9.0", so it's
possible this is what their new MIDIQuest version 9.0 product will do
to you. If the MIDIQuest people are reading, they need to fire their
UI developer, hire a UI expert and do what they say. They need to get
real technical writers who are believers of "concise" straightforward
documentation. And finally, they need to do usability tests with
human beings who are also musicians, not Amiga** programmers from
the '80s who have access to an FM radio which periodically plays
synthpop.
-Brian
** no disrespect to the Amiga. I owned one and loved it.
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[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]Message
Re: [xl7] OT: MIDIQuest Rant
2003-06-17 by biz
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