I disagree. The Wacom tablet and its pen have made a huge step away from the mouse and there are many unique ways to draw and paint within computer software as long as everybody stops demanding that all software looks and acts like PhotoShop. It's like saying the pencil and brush haven't made any progress since the long ago ages when they were invented. And the fork and knife haven't evolved in any way to make food taste better either.slowtiger wrote:. We still haven't evolved very far from drawing with the first mouse.
If you are thinking only of ways to mechanically improve mundane tasks such as inbetweening than you are looking into the sphere of artificial intelligence and I'm not so sure if that would make for happier works of art. The success of creativity lies elsewhere than in the mechanics of tools. This is because we tend to admire other people's ways of expressing individuality through art. That skill lies in the sphere's of the soul and is a spiritual quest.
Surgeons today have fantastic computerized laser machines to carve out tumors with better precision than they could have ever achieved with a mere scalpel, even though a successful operation still depends on the surgeon's personal skills. You seem to be asking for the equivalent of that kind of improvement for the artist's tools, but there is a difference between mechanical skillfulness and creativity. Inbetweening isn't dull mechanics; it has more artfulness to its execution than you give it credit.