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Monte Carlo 928 – Monte Carlo was the first Turtle Beach sound card that was not designed in-house. It was based on OPTi 928 reference design with Crystal Semiconductor codec for a "Sound Blaster and Windows Sound System Compatible" card. Featuring Yamaha OPL3, Wave Blaster connector and 3x AT-BUS CD-ROM interfaces.
Turtle Beach has also developed sound cards, MIDI synthesizers, and various audio software packages and network audio devices. In 1988, Turtle Beach developed its first product, a hard disk–based audio editing system. The product was named the "56K digital recording system" and was released in 1990 and was considered the first of its kind.
Pages in category "Sound cards" ... Turtle Beach Corporation; W. Windows Sound System This page was last edited on 31 March 2024, at 21:21 (UTC). ...
The first member of the line, the Vortex AU8820, was announced on July 14, 1997, [4] and was used in by a number of sound card manufacturers, like Turtle Beach and TerraTec. After Aureal's release of A3D 2.0, the Vortex AU8830 (known as the Vortex 2) was announced on August 6, 1998. [5]
Sound card Mozart 16 for ISA-16 bus A Turtle Beach sound card for PCI bus Echo Digital Audio's Indigo IO – PCMCIA card-bit 96 kHz stereo in/out sound card A VIA Technologies Envy sound card for PC, 5.1 channel for PCI slot. Sound cards for IBM PC–compatible computers were very uncommon until 1988.
The Music Kit was integrated with the Sound Kit. [ 3 ] First demonstrated in 1988 at Davies Symphony Hall , the 1.0 release shipped in 1989 with the NeXT computer and included an Objective-C library for creating music and sound applications, a score language that included expression evaluation, MIDI, sound and DSP drivers, several command-line ...
30 Sound cards. 31 TV tuner cards. 32 USB flash drives. 33 Webcams. 34 See also. 35 References. Toggle the table of contents. ... Turtle Beach; VIA Technologies ...
AudioTron. The Turtle Beach AudioTron AT-100 and AT-101 are 1U rack-mountable, hi-fi network music players. An AudioTron can stream digital music files from personal computers or NAS devices without the need to install server software on these storage devices since the AudioTron is based on Windows CE and is therefore a computer that looks like audio hardware. [1]