As the title says.  I'm collecting ideas and the best place to start is
with good examples of what is currently available today.

A conversational interface to a milling machine is one that does not expose
G-Code or CAD/CAM to the user.  The user "tells" the machine what he wants,
usually by selecting from a short menu.  The machine provides a preview of
what he asked for.  Possibly the user sees a mistake and makes a correction
and then finally says "Do it."

There are some serious limits to what can be done with this kind of
interface.  But also the simple kinds of operations that can be done are
common and useful.   For example surface milling a large flat area, boring
a hole of a given diameter and depth or making a pocket.

What I'm looking for is examples of this kind of user interface and
opinions, good or bad.  Anyone have links to products and experience (good
or bad) using them.

My goals to make something VERY SIMPLE to do one-off machine tasks.  This
kind of software is NOT real-time so it could run on any hardware, even a
cell phone.

Please don't say you would never us this because you write g-code.  No, you
do that only because it is the least bad option.


Sorry to cross post this.  I know some of you will see this twice

-- 

Chris Albertson
Redondo Beach, California

-- 
website: http://www.machinekit.io blog: http://blog.machinekit.io github: 
https://github.com/machinekit
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