Yes, for sure, there's a level of information overload. The automatic features bring a lot of benefits, but they actually increased the complexity a great amount. For sure, the existing RC transmitters aren't helping matters. Again, just the other day, I was trying to change modes, but it wasn't responding... oops, that was the wrong lever. Luckily that lever didn't have anything programmed to it.
One of the reasons I'm looking to build a clean-sheet ground control system.
2 sticks
6 pushbuttons for mode selection. No knob, or 2 and 3 position switch combos. 6 colour coded buttons. Push a button, that's the mode you get.
1 knob for Ch6 tuning.
1 switch for Ch7 functions.
And then one more knob or switch for Ch8 which is currently unused.
But that's it. I don't need a fighter plane cockpit and one hundred assignable buttons.
One aspect to this as well, and you sort of touched on it, is airliner automation. I've heard it said that the automation makes them safer. But the problem lies in the transfer from automatic flight to manual flight, when suddenly something goes wrong. It's an order of magnitude more difficult for a pilot to take control back over *after* something goes wrong, compared to regaining control if he was flying manually when something failed. It's just, to get your brain back in the game is difficult.
Same applies here. If the copter just starts zipping off in one direction when you were in GPS hold, is it because something is wrong with the GPS hold program? Or have you had a motor failure?
Back in the day when I was flying on a Futaba Conquest 6-channel non-computer radio, there was a lot less to think about. You would only use one radio for a given airplane, because all your servo reverse switches and endpoint knobs, you didn't want to have to reconfigure that. Sure, multi-model memory is nice, but I never took off holding the wrong transmitter! And it only had 2 switches. A 2 position for Ch 5 gear, and 3 position for Ch 6 flaps. And you couldn't reassign them.
But, if I had a radio glitch, down goes the plane. Or a flyaway.