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Well, I wasn't trying to change the definition of "Effect" I just consider anything between the instrument and the listener to be an effect. I still think of the EDP as a very complex digital delay. Sure you can manipulate it, but that's true of almost all my effects processors. Who cares if people don't use the realtime controls? Screw them. I feel the same way about the Art vs. Craft issue (which I will never debate again, so don't go there). Why wouldn't a lot of people accept the definition of these words? I know why. It's because they've got value's implied, craft's people feel the term "craftsperson" (HI RICK!) is derogatory. Same thing with effect. "Oh, he/she sounds good, but they're just playing through a lot of effects." It's got a bad connotation. I think people resist the term "effect" because of it's stigma. Why would a digital delay with a feedback of 100% no longer be an effect? At what feedback% does a delay stop being an effect? How many extra features does a delay have to have before it stops being an effect? This is what I don't get. The EDP and the Repeater are EFFECTS! They move what you've played forward IN TIME! On Tuesday, July 23, 2002, at 01:36 AM, Kim Flint wrote: > The nuance of choosing one word over another is gone. Why do you want > that? Let the words be distinct and hold clear meaning. If all the > words begin to mean everything, than you won't be able to say anything > at all.