My gripes with the system :
Do the laws state what they mean by "pitching outside leg stump" or "hitting in line with stumps"? I doubt the pre-DRS law did - was it "if any part of the ball pitches outside leg it can't be lbw", or "if all of the ball pitches outside leg...", ie if any part pitches in line with the stumps it can be lbw. Same with the impact being in line - some of the ball or all of the ball? As far as I'm concerned, like in tennis, where it's measuring something which has actually happened, it should be 100% yes / no, and there shouldn't be an umpire's call on where it pitched or where it impacted the pad.
Second, the margin of error for the prediction should vary based on how far from the wickets the point of impact is. If you play a forward defensive shot, get hit on the pad and the ball is shown to be clipping leg stump, say 40% of the ball hitting some part of the stump, then I'm fine an umpire giving that not out on a "can't be sure" basis and having technology uphold the decision. If you go right back to an offspinner and miss it, and again technology shows 40% of the ball hitting the leg stump, then to me that should be out whatever the umpire initially says. Yes, less than half the ball is predicted to hit the stumps exactly like the previous ball, but the likelihood that none of the ball is about to hit the stumps surely differs depending on the distance left for it to travel.
Visually you could present it like the strike zone earlier - if any part of the ball is hitting within a strike zone it's out, but the strike zone varies in size depending on the point of impact. Big stride forward, strike zone shrinks to say middle half of the off and leg stumps and 2-3 cm from the top of the bails; hit on the back foot, strike zone is basically the size of the stumps minus a coat of varnish or two...