[Ta...] Posted Tuesday at 04:21 PM Share Posted Tuesday at 04:21 PM (edited) The top right sensor initialize button in GOM Inspect has white as "sensor initialized" and gray as "sensor closed". I interpret white as closed or, de-initialized and gray (or any other color) as initialized. Ambiguity in this critical button is frustrating, and is actually risky with our ScanBox. The roll over text "initialize/close sensor" is not helpful when verifying. For this critical button, I suggest a light blue or any other obvious color, outline indicator, or reverse, that would clearly indicates the sensor status... anything that avoids matching the surrounding application header color. Vielen Dank! -TadR, UNEW, Inc., Stuart, FL USA Edited Tuesday at 04:39 PM White/Gray confusion.. even while trying to interpret the sensor status. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
[Ta...] Posted Tuesday at 05:32 PM Author Share Posted Tuesday at 05:32 PM (edited) To be clear: GOM Blade Inspect Pro 2022, Service Pack 6 We recently migrated from 2020, where the header is green and the sensor status is much more clear. Also: During a measurement, the initialized button turns off and on. Whatever the feedback information the on/off initialize lights are supposed to provide, is not very helpful. A non-changing status indication of sensor/light/lasers would be much more informative. Initializing the sensor takes several seconds and we need to know for certain before selecting initialize sensor. Edited Tuesday at 05:52 PM Just trying to be clear. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
[Ja...] Posted Tuesday at 09:45 PM Share Posted Tuesday at 09:45 PM I think a reasonable general point, blue would seem appropriate. It does still go from yellow to white to indicate warm up completed initialised has always been white , so i think your point is about contrast. I haven looked for it for a long time but look for ' dark mode' in the preferences for the gui visualisation , this might already serve the purpose. The laser pointers serve no real purpose in automation , but do in manual scanning , the software needs to support both. However, it shouldnt be risky at all. Yes the scanbox is 'live' when the sensor is initialised BUT , you have to reset the safety then press the run button , that is two clear actions that simply cannot happen by an accident , in my view anyway. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
[Ta...] Posted 8 hours ago Author Share Posted 8 hours ago Thank you James for the quick reply. I did a quick search for "dark mode" for a change of display colors. Yes, not having lasers on our two CORE sensors was a big loss for our high-output manual scanning operations. It made for fast scanning on our old ATOS 2M and 4M scanners. Risky... I sometimes like to have the ATOS VMR robot on my screen go through the verified program sequence before running a new or pickup template. It's THEN that I need to be certain the sensor is not initialized. Yes, a high-contrast blue button would be a clear indicator. So eine gute Empfehlung. Vielleicht mit Ihrer Hilfe, es kann passieren! Thank you for all you do! -TadR Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
[Ta...] Posted 6 hours ago Author Share Posted 6 hours ago I must also say: So many times, I have executed a measurement series on our ScanBox, then found that the "software robot" is scanning because the sensor is not initialized. Then, I must undo or re-Apply Current Parameters --> Exposure to my black-icon measurement positions. If the sensor (light/lasers) are initialized, they should always be indicate as initialized (blue, as you suggested). This area should indicate the absolute status, even while taking a measurements. The gray/white changes while taking a measurement creates uncertainty. Hope this helps! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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