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  2. RTP-MIDI - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RTP-MIDI

    Tobias Erichsen in 2010 released a Windows implementation of Apple's RTP-MIDI driver. [7] This driver works under XP, Vista, Windows 7, Windows 8, and Windows 10, 32 and 64 bit versions. [8] The driver uses a configuration panel very similar to the Apple's one, and is fully compliant with Apple's implementation. It can then be used to connect a ...

  3. Windows legacy audio components - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_legacy_audio...

    The MME API or the Windows Multimedia API (also known as WinMM) was the first universal and standardized Windows audio API. Wave sound events played in Windows (up to Windows XP) and MIDI I/O use MME. The devices listed in the Multimedia/Sounds and Audio control panel applet represent the MME API of the sound card driver.

  4. MPU-401 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MPU-401

    It had a Mini-DIN female connector for the breakout box with two MIDI In connectors and two MIDI Out connectors. An application to assign resources (plug and play) must be run to use the card in DOS. This application is not a TSR (it does not take up precious conventional memory). S-MPU/FMT: For FM Towns [22] [23] LAPC-I: for the IBM PC and ...

  5. Roland MT-32 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roland_MT-32

    The most notable of these emulators is the open-source project Munt, [13] which emulates the MT-32 hardware by way of a virtual device driver for Microsoft Windows, or a virtual MIDI device for OS X, BSD and Linux. It is also incorporated into ScummVM, an open-source adventure game interpreter, as of version 0.7.0.

  6. Game port - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Game_port

    The IBM PC game port first appeared during the initial launch of the original IBM PC in 1981, in the form of an optional US$55 expansion card known as the Game Control Adapter. [ 8 ] [ 9 ] The design allowed for four analog axes and four buttons on one port, allowing two joysticks or four paddles to be connected via a special "Y-splitter" cable.

  7. HardSID - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HardSID

    The PCI Windows drivers support up to 32-bit Windows XP, and there is no 64-bit drivers or Windows Vista/7 support at all. Unofficial drivers are available for Linux. The HardSID USB devices are shipped with Windows drivers for XP/Vista/7 only. Mac OS X support was already worked on but

  8. Yamaha YMF7xx - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yamaha_YMF7xx

    The DS-XG series features hardware-assisted XG MIDI synthesis with either 32- or 64-note polyphony, full-duplex playback and recording at any samplerate (internally upsampled to 48 kHz), external game controller and MIDI interface, and a legacy block for DOS application support.

  9. VDMSound - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VDMSound

    VDMSound allows the user to provide custom mappings for MIDI instruments as well as for joystick buttons and axes. MIDI mappings are particularly useful when the type of MIDI device supported by a game (e.g. MT-32) is different from the type of hardware or software device actually present on the system (e.g. Microsoft GS Wavetable SW Synth.) [7]