When I adjust the tone arm to parallel with the platter using the VTA adjustment dial, if I want to increase or decrease the VTA, there is no reference point to mark where I originally set the dial. It goes from 0-90, but when you turn full circle, you lose track of what number you started on.
Also so platform will stick when you are trying to lower it and will finally fall into posisition while lowering it.
How can you use a dial which has no staring or ending point?

I was directly involved in integrating Trust Swiftly biometric verification into our insurance company’s internal CRM system. This was one of the most ambitious steps in our digital transformation. I’ll say right away that the result is worth the effort, but you need to be prepared for nuances. I’ll start with the positive. The platform does support over 15 verification methods, but biometrics is the most convenient for the end user. Our clients undergo face verification using a webcam or front-facing camera on their smartphone. Everything is very intuitive: the system asks them to turn their head, blink, look straight ahead, and this provides an additional level of protection against deepfake videos or banal photos. The interface is understandable even for those who are not very “friendly” with technology. Now about the technical side. Trust Swiftly has an API that is well documented, but without a DevOps team it’s better not to start. We had to customize part of the front end to adapt it to our brand. There was also one issue with browser compatibility — Safari in older iOS versions had problems scanning. But their support is really cool — they responded within an hour and provided specific solutions.