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>It'd boost flagging sales, it'd encourage people who >already had one to get another, it'd boost people who >are turned on to looping by the Repeater to look >at a very different alternative. ...except that there are no "flagging sales". Remember, Gibson sells all they can make without advertising. They've got a tidy little profit center. My experience is that the EDP lives in a niche--a bunch of people hear about it and decide that it's too complicated and/or expensive for their taste. The Line6 covers most of what they want out of a looping device and costs about a third the price. Plus, it's a pedal, and a lot of people prefer pedals over racks. Other people decide that they'd prefer a full-on sampler, or a software-based system since the extensive real-time features of the EDP aren't needed for what they're doing. In the middle, you've got people who have a specific need for what the EDP uniquely offers, AND are willing to pay for it. Taking a cue from the Focusrite folks in faceplate design isn't going to significantly change the size of that group. Maybe if you were designing the EDP from the ground up it'd make sense to pretty up the faceplate, but at this point we're talking about something that's been around for what--six, seven years? It's not going to happen. It's so rare to get a piece of gear right from a functional standpoint, worrying about this sort of thing seems silly. TH