I'm inclined to disagree. I think that people find it easier to interpret data if presented in a display they are familiar with receiving.
I wear an analogue watch and have done so my entire life. My brain is very accustomed to interpreting the needles. I read, and interpret, an analogue display many times per day. I've never owned a digital watch.
Many people don't wear analogue watches nowadays. They use their phones etc... So they will probably find a digital display more familiar and easier to assimilate that data.
Most divers are familiar with, and used to, analogue SPGs..... so there's no issue interpreting that data. It's very logical and perfect for beginners to expert alike.
This is too many numbers on too many screens?
It will be too many numbers (on 1 screen, actually), if they add a tank pressure readout?
Both Excellent points.
Below is a screen grab of an Eon Steel in Graphical mode. Ignore the numbers In this example the tank pressure is shown as a graphical dial (blue) along with the actual pressure. You can set teh machine to display what they call classic, which is just numbers. The user has a choice depending on preference
Much like an SPG you can glance at it and read the position of the display rather than the numbers. On an SPG you don't always care to what precise number to needle is pointing, rather the position. If its around to the right near the "2 O clock" position you have lots of gas. Over to the left at the " 9 O clock" position then not so much gas. If the needle is pointing to the Red area time to surface.
Likewise in a car. You look at your fuel gauge. It doesn't tell you exactly how many liters or gallons you have. you just see that its either Full, at the Half way point or near the reserve. You experience (for the most part) tells you if you have enough fuel for the journey your about to do or whether you have enough to reach your destination.
Similarly your ascent rate even battery life on computers is generally a bar graph already.
So, assuming/ accepting that OLED/TFT screens will be more prevalent in the future then the manufacturers, and it gives then the opportunity to allow the user's a
CHOICE in how they want the data displayed.
For instance. There is no reason(in theory) why a screen couldn't just have bar graphs for all - including depth. You could set your max depth on MOD, Qualification or Dive Plan for instance. I'm not saying its right but they could.
Likewise some people want numbers. Perhaps a technical wants his ascent rate displayed as actual ft/m per minute. Easy. Choice.
The Suunto screen isn't perfect but it and others are the 1st generation of graphical displays. In the future they may become more refined after feedback from users as well as ideas and innovations from other manufacturers
Moving back to AI and the car analogy. 20 years ago electric windows were only on the top level cars and seen as a luxury item. There was noting really wrong with the mechanical winder. Yet now only the most basic of cars have a mechanical winder everyone else presses a button. And its accepted as the norm
New drivers have no other experience. Yet electric windows are more costly and more complex (generally speaking)
In the future I see that AI transmitters will be bundled with the computer as a standard package. If there were 2 computers of capability and of the same price - if one came with a TX and one didn't then the average user is more likely to pick up the one with the TX as it looks to be better value.
Now the purest/ experienced Diver may see through this, but given that they account for a low volume of sales do they care? No when you make something you're in business to sell it.
There may well be a place for low volume manufacturers serving a specialised market and rightly so.
The choices and desires of one group shouldn't be enforced on another. As long as the manufacturers can still make money on the low volume require to serve a smaller uptake (subsidised by the higher volume of the other group) then that's fine.