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For certain markets and eras, Sony would use other commercial names for their radio clock products, such as DIGIMATIC (UK/EU), or Digital 24 (US/North America), however the actual design would be identical or similar to those branded as Dream Machine. The manufacturing of Dream Machine is an early example of outsourcing.
Sony: Sony SPC700 (Nintendo S-SMP) 1990 8 16 32,000 Super Nintendo Entertainment System console Bit Rate Reduction (BRR) ADPCM [138] [139] Sony SPU (Sound Processing Unit) 1994 24 16 44,100 Sony PlayStation console ADPCM [140] Sony SPU2: 1999 48 16 48,000 Sony PlayStation 2 console ADPCM, Dual-core sound unit, Supports Dolby Digital (AC-3), DTS ...
Sony Dream Machine; Street clock; T. Torsion pendulum clock; Trumpeter clock; Turret clock; W. Watch 1505 This page was last edited on 22 June 2020, at 23:00 (UTC). ...
Direct Stream Digital (DSD) is a trademark used by Sony and Philips for their system for digitally encoding audio signals for the Super Audio CD (SACD).. DSD uses delta-sigma modulation, a form of pulse-density modulation encoding, a technique to represent audio signals in digital format, a sequence of single-bit values at a sampling rate of 2.8224 MHz.
"The Dream Machine", an episode of Astro Boy; Computer Lib/Dream Machines, a 1974 two-in-one set book by Ted Nelson; Dream Machine, a 1990 direct-to-video thriller film; The Dream Machine (miniseries), a 1992, BBC documentary series, on the history of computing, released in the US as The Machine That Changed the World
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The Hyperpak could also act as a Jump Pak by setting its switch to rumble mode. The Performance Memory Card was a third-party basic memory card with the same 200 blocks of storage as a VMU. The Performance Mega Memory Card acted like a 4X Memory Card. It used a switch on its back to select the desired memory card "page".
The TR-55's five transistors were designed in house by Sony, the technology having been licensed from Bell Labs. This made Sony the first company to produce commercial transistor radios from the ground up. American company Regency had launched their Regency TR-1 transistor radio earlier in 1954, but bought the transistors from Texas Instruments ...