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  2. Sound Blaster 16 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound_Blaster_16

    Mitsumi (CT2700) and Philips/LMSI (CT1780) for example. Most Sound Blaster 16 cards came with the Panasonic / Matsushita interface, which resembles IDE with the 40PIN connector. The Sound Blaster with the SCSI controller (SB 16 SCSI-2, CT1770, CT1779) was designed for use with "High End" SCSI based CD-ROM drives. The controller did not have the ...

  3. Sound Blaster Live! - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound_Blaster_Live!

    When compared to CT4780, the Dell specific CT4780 had a different internal connector arrangement (the unpopulated I2S_IN connector on CT4780 was removed and effectivelly replaced by Dells front panel header). This card is based on Generation 2 of Sound Blaster Live! cards and uses EMU10K1-SFF or EMU10K1-JFF audio processor.

  4. Diamond Multimedia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diamond_Multimedia

    Diamond XtremeSound is the first sound card line launched after the company's restructuring in 2003. Diamond XtremeSound - 5.1/16 bit Sound Card (XS51) C-Media CMI8738-LX PCI; Diamond XtremeSound - 7.1/24 bit Sound Card (XS71) C-Media CMI8768 PCI; Diamond XtremeSound - 7.1/24 bit Sound Card with Dolby Digital Live (XS71DDL) C-Media CMI8768+ PCI

  5. Thunder Board - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thunder_Board

    Thunder Board. The Thunder Board was an 8-bit mono personal computer integrated circuit sound card from Media Vision, that had Sound Blaster compatibility at a reduced price. . It was widely advertised as “proudly made in the USA”; possibly a reference to the Sound Blaster, manufactured by the competing Singapore-based Creative Technologi

  6. List of sound chips - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sound_chips

    Combined sound and graphics NMOS chip [16] SID (6581 / 8580) 1981 3 Commodore 64 and Commodore 128 computers, Elektron SidStation synthesizer sound module: NMOS chip (6581) / HMOS-II chip (8580) [17] [18] TED (7360 / 8360) 1983 2 Commodore 16, Commodore Plus/4: HMOS chip [19] Microchip Technology: AY8930: 1989 3 Covox Sound Master Card Oki ...

  7. Yamaha YMF7xx - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yamaha_YMF7xx

    A PCI Yamaha XG sound card with a YMF724E-V chipset. Another Yamaha XG sound card with YMF724E-V chipset. The last model number for controller chips used on ISA bus cards is 719; chips used on PCI cards start at 720 and higher. Chips for PCI bus standalone adapters are marked YMF7x4, while on-board or embedded systems are marked YMF7x0.

  8. Creative Wave Blaster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creative_Wave_Blaster

    Since 2000, Wave Blaster-capable sound cards for computers are becoming rare. In 2005, Terratec released a new Wave Blaster daughterboard called the Wave XTable with 16mb of on-board sample memory comprising 500 instruments and 10 drum kits. In 2014, a new compatible card called Dreamblaster S1 was produced by the Belgian company Serdaco.

  9. IBM Music Feature Card - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_Music_Feature_Card

    The IBM Music Feature Card (simply referred to as the IBM PC 'Music Feature' by IBM) and sometimes abbreviated as the IBM MFC, or just IMFC) is a professional-level [1] sound card for the PC, and used the 8-bit ISA bus. The card made use of the Yamaha YM2164 chip which produces sound and music via FM synthesis. [2]