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  2. E-mu SP-12 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E-mu_SP-12

    E-mu SP-12. The E-mu SP-12 is a sampling drum machine. [1] Designed in 1984, SP-12 was announced by E-mu Systems in 1985. [2] Expanding on the features of E-mu’s affordable and commercially successful Drumulator, a programmable digital drum machine, SP-12 introduced user sampling, enabling musicians to sample their own drums and other sounds.

  3. E-mu Drumulator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E-mu_Drumulator

    E-mu Drumulator is a sample-based drum machine by E-mu Systems. Introduced in 1983 at a price of $995 USD, the Drumulator was the first programmable drum machine with built-in samples for under $1,000, [1] resulting in sales of over 10,000 units over two years. [2] The Drumulator was the predecessor of the E-mu SP-12.

  4. E-mu Systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E-mu_Systems

    The 1820m was touted as the series' flagship product until the 1616 and 1616M were released (A PCI version of the 1616/M later followed). All of the cards had drivers for Microsoft Windows 2000 and later versions that were current at time of the respective products' release. (32- and 64-bit). Only a beta version driver was released for Windows 7.

  5. E-mu SP-1200 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E-mu_SP-1200

    SP-12 was the first sampling drum machine released. [6] The main changes from Drumulator to SP-12 were the introduction of integrated 12-bit linear user sampling allowing users to record their own sounds and improvements to the user interface, while the playback electronics remained mostly unchanged.

  6. Hydrogen (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrogen_(software)

    Hydrogen is an open-source drum machine created by Alessandro Cominu, an Italian programmer who goes by the pseudonym Comix. [1] Its main goal is to provide professional yet simple and intuitive pattern-based drum programming. Hydrogen was originally developed for Linux, and later ported to Mac OS X and Windows.

  7. Sandboxie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sandboxie

    Sandboxie is an open-source OS-level virtualization solution for Microsoft Windows. [10] [11] [12] It is a sandboxing solution that creates an isolated operating environment in which applications can run without permanently modifying the local system.

  8. Roland TR-909 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roland_TR-909

    The 909 was the first Roland drum machine to use samples, for its crash, ride and hi-hat sounds. [9] Hoshiai sampled his own kit for the cymbals, using a mismatched pair of Paiste and Zildjian hi-hat cymbals. [7] He sampled them in 6-bit and edited the waveform on a computer with a CP/M-80 operating system. [7]

  9. Linn LM-1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linn_LM-1

    The LM-1 was designed by the American engineer and guitarist Roger Linn in the late 1970s. [1] Linn was dissatisfied with drum machines available at the time, such as the Roland CR-78, and wanted a machine that did not simply play preset patterns and "sound like crickets".