RAI
Well-Known Member
True, but the pole question did not mention that and this is in Scuttlebutt. Probably my bad, as I have the responses in last - first order.In the context of sailing, it's unlikely to be the Milwaukee Fire Department![]()
True, but the pole question did not mention that and this is in Scuttlebutt. Probably my bad, as I have the responses in last - first order.In the context of sailing, it's unlikely to be the Milwaukee Fire Department![]()
True, but the pole question did not mention that and this is in Scuttlebutt.
for some unfathomable reason he wants to use the Raymarine salesman's word for it instead of the sailor's word.
Why not just "...for an 8" display"?
First pedantry - TLA or MFD are not acronyms, they are initials. An acronym is a set of initials pronounced as a word like NATO or RADAR. ...
Spot on.
Use of unnecessary TLAs is plain irritating.
First pedantry - TLA or MFD are not acronyms, they are initials. An acronym is a set of initials pronounced as a word like NATO or RADAR.
As for Snook's MFD, I have no difficulty in spotting one in a picture as long as some other device with multi-function capability to confuse me
Having said that I've cringed at the contrived marketing term "MFD" since I first started seeing it. How long *is* it since they invented it? 4 years? 5?
Doesn't matter. Making telephone calls is about fourth or fifth on the list of things I do with the miniature computer in my pocket, but we still call it a "phone", not a browser, messager, tweeter, or emailer.
"Forward of the helm there's space for an 8in plotter" works perfectly - the writing flows, everyone will know what you mean, and nobody except the pedants in the manufacturer's technical-writing department ought to object to it.
Pete
I'm currently writing new gear, one piece is about a Raymarine product which is compatible with all their . . .
If I type 'plotters' I'll have readers and Raymarine onto me. .
Two at least fair reasons I'd say.: One because that's what it's called in the marketing and documentation and how it's described on the Raymarine website [...] so there's a "not confusing the punters" angle
Well, apart from the 46% (currently) of punters who will apparently be confused by "MFD".
Are there really readers who would complain about the word "plotter"?
Yes but that's already explicit in this thread and was why snooks was asking. I was trying to answer your "Why pander to Raymarine etc." question. A different source of confusion is going to be calling it something in a review which isn't mentioned on the manufacturer's web site or advertising when the potential punter goes looking for the product. I wasn't making a judgment on whether that's more or less confusing than calling it by a more widely recognised term. Did I mention I don't like "MFD"?![]()
I note that my C90W's manual calls it a "Multifunction Display" (published 2008). The manual for the previous generation E-Series classic calls it a "Networked Display" or just "Display". E-Series classics don't have noticeably fewer functions than the "Wide"s
Considering that almost every item on a boat is "multifunction" and a device, MFD covers everything on board, including the heads. Is the cockpit, for navigation, lunch, a nap in the sun? The anchor for anchoring, bashing in visitors heads in the marina, movable ballast? Are halyards only for the yard or now the sail as well, sending someone up the mast, hoisting bunting? Why the F do marketing idiots think they have to call something multifunction just because the engineers have made it do more than one thing?
Anyway is the screen at the helm actually the multifunction device, or it only a display, displaying information from a variety of sources?