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Conference napalm::commusic_v1

Title:* * Computer Music, MIDI, and Related Topics * *
Notice:Conference has been write-locked. Use new version.
Moderator:DYPSS1::SCHAFER
Created:Thu Feb 20 1986
Last Modified:Mon Aug 29 1994
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:2852
Total number of notes:33157

2842.0. "Free to good home..." by ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI (This time forever!) Wed Feb 12 1992 11:20

    
    	I'm down here in the basement of bldg 5 at the mill. People
    throw out lots of things, and much of ends up here as it waits for
    disposal. One things I found that's sure to go, eventually, is a
    "DIGITAL Q BUS MUSIC BOARD". It's a simple affair, with two "Sound
    AY-3-8912" chips by "GI", date coded 8210. The module # is EY-0105E
    -MS-0101. It has a single phono jack output.
    
    	If anyone would like this module, for posterity, for a museum
    donation or simply to save it from obliteration - write me on ELESYS:: 
    and I'll gladly send it to you - through interoffice mail of course.
    BTW, the person who's going to do the most with it "wins" - if it's
    just going to sit in storage until it gets thrown out on your end -
    it might as well remain here.
    
    	Joe
    
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2842.1GI = General InstrumentTALK::HARRIMAN'Politically Correct' is an oxymoronWed Feb 12 1992 12:1810

	Huh. Those GI chips used to be sold by Radio Shack. I remember
	because I bought one and played with it (I think that was the
	same part number). Single voice per chip, does sound effects
	and such. 

	No other documentation I suppose, eh?

	/pjh
2842.23 channels per chip - 6 voice totalPRNSYS::LOMICKAJJeffrey A. LomickaThu Feb 13 1992 13:115
I recall that board was used as part of a course in Q-bus I/O or
real-time programming or something like that.  I know at least one
person who as played with it, but he's not at DEC any more.

That's the same sound chip as is in the Atari ST.
2842.3YNGSTR::BENNETTFri Feb 14 1992 10:0122
    Wow.  Blast from the past.
    
    When I first started at DEC, I was an applications engineer for the
    LSI-11 Q-bus stuff.  I designed that music board as an excercise in
    simple Q-bus interfaces, and to be used for trade show demos.
    
    A course developer from Ed Services heard about it, and thought it
    would be the perfect complement to a course in MicroPower/Pascal that
    he was writing.  So I cleaned up the design a little, and we had a
    group in Acton Mfg make 500 boards.  I don't think the course sold very
    well, and I have no idea what happened to the bulk of the boards.  I
    still have a few, for sentimental reasons.
    
    There's not much to the board.  The GI chip contains 8 registers, one
    byte wide.  The board has a hard-coded Q-bus base addresss, and the GI
    registers are mapped to 8 consecutive words from the base address, one
    chip for low byte and one chip for high byte address.
    
    If anyone wants prints or other details, send me mail.  I could
    probably dig them up.
    
    -Steve
2842.4Crucial!LARVAE::MOORE_AFri Feb 14 1992 10:1515
    AY 38910 
    
    I spent a good part of the time I was supposed to be studying
    engineering science at school trying to figure out how to interface
    this chip to my trusty Acorn Atom (A UK micro based on the 6502).
    
    I eventually got a few beeps and whistles out of it. Even started to
    try to write a sequencer of sorts but then discovered women.
    
    Memories ....
    
    regards
    
    Andrew
     
2842.5exELESYS::JASNIEWSKIThis time forever!Fri Feb 14 1992 15:134
    
    Seems the board has found a good home.
    
    	Joe
2842.6More flexibility with standard productsDFN8LY::JANZENI can gleek upon occasionFri Feb 14 1992 17:083
Even a PDP11/23 can play 4 voices of arbitrary waveshape out a AAV11-C.
A later model of a PDP11 would be able to do perfectly well.
Tom