The dna system continues to have the most intuitive UIs of top end advanced mods in the industry. This is an Evolv philosophy. No idea what you are talking about but multiple clicks have never been used on the dna system for anything other than things that are intended to be difficult (i.e. locking and unlocking).
- Locked mode: Five clicks to lock, five clicks to unlock
- This one is at least pretty standard
- Stealth mode: Five clicks to lock, then hold Fire and Down for five seconds, then five clicks to unlock.
- Total button presses: 13, with five second delay.
- Right Mode and Left Mode: Five clicks to lock, then hold Fire and Up for five seconds, then five clicks to unlock.
- Total button presses: 13, with five second delay.
- Power Locked mode: Hold Up and Down for two seconds.
- Total button presses: two, with two second delay. Yay, only two!
- Actually unyay if you have atty lock and can't use this any more
- Add one feature, have to lose another? That's much better than adding a new feature on the end of a menu!
- Max Temperature Adjust: Five clicks to lock, hold Up and Down for two seconds, scroll through the temperatures, then five clicks to unlock.
- Total button presses: 13, with two second delay
- Disable TC: Five clicks to lock, hold Up and Down for two seconds, scroll through the temperatures upwards until you get to the max temperature, then once more for OFF; then five clicks to unlock.
- Total button presses: 13, with two second delay + however many presses/holds necessary to get from your set temp to the top.
- Celcius/Fahrenheit switch: Five clicks to lock, hold Up and Down for two seconds, scroll through the temperatures downwards until it goes to the other temperature type; then five clicks to unlock.
- Total button presses: 12, with two second delay + however many presses/holds necessary to get from your set temp through the bottom and then to the C setting you want.
This my friend is not intuitive. It's not in the ballpark of intuitive, it ain't in the same league, hell it's not even the same sport.
Going upwards or downwards through the temps depending on whether you want to turn TC off, or whether you want to change from C/F, is a particularly good example of this.
Just try and think it through a minute. Try and let those self-defences drop, try and imagine for a moment you haven't tried to fuse your mind into your device. Imagine if on your oven, the way to switch from normal to Fan was to turn the temperature dial all the way up to 600°F and then back down to 0°F. Imagine if in your car, the way to turn your cruise control on or off was to switch back and forth from Neutral to Drive twice.
There's a reason we have menus. The current Evolv UI is not remotely intuitive. It's too many clicks, it's obscure, it tries to put too many things onto too many buttons - if you need multiple functions for a given button, if you need hold-timeouts, if you need to control something by whether you scroll up or down through a range of settings, then something's wrong.
This isn't completely Evolv's fault - vaping manufacturer's obsession with too few buttons is a big part of it. All mods could benefit from more buttons, especially the Yihi with its memories (where it's daft there's no dedicated Memory button, such that you're always in Memory mode and can only change wattage outside of memory by going into a menu.)
So everyone is at fault, but at least the majority of the rest have implemented proper menus.
The Dicodes' is a particularly good example of a planned, well-prepared menu. It has ten times more things to change than a DNA 40, but it never feels haphazard or confusing. It can be quite a few clicks, but that's because as a tube it's only one button - that will improve when they bring out a box mod. But it's a testament to their good design that it's intuitive and relatively quick to use even though it only has one button.