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  2. Sound Blaster 16 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound_Blaster_16

    The Sound Blaster 16 WavEffects was released in 1997 as a cheaper and simpler redesign of the Sound Blaster 16. It came with Creative WaveSynth also bundled on Sound Blaster AWE64 Gold , a physical modeling software synthesizer developed by Seer Systems (led by Dave Smith ), based on Sondius WaveGuide technology (developed at Stanford's CCRMA ).

  3. Ensoniq AudioPCI - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ensoniq_AudioPCI

    The AudioPCI DOS driver included Ensoniq Soundscape 16-bit digital audio and sample-based synthesis support, along with support for Sound Blaster Pro, AdLib Gold, General MIDI, and MT-32. However, without actual hardware for FM synthesis , FM music and sound effects were simulated using samples, often with unacceptable results.

  4. Mpxplay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mpxplay

    As DOS needs drivers to be programmed into each application in which they are used, it can be useful to run a sound card that is nearly universally supported by most applications with sound support: SoundBlaster 16. Mpxplay can use this technique to support the following sound cards: ESS; Gravis Ultrasound; Sound Blaster 16; Sound Blaster Pro

  5. Windows Sound System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_Sound_System

    WSS 1.0a drivers were released in February 1993. They introduced single-mode DMA, supported games in MS-DOS, Ad Lib and Sound Blaster emulation. [4]WSS 2.0 drivers, released in October 1993, added support for OEM sound cards (Media Vision, Creative Labs, ESS Technology) and included an improved DOS driver (WSSXLAT.EXE) that provided Sound Blaster 16 compatibility for digital sampling. [4]

  6. Sound Blaster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound_Blaster

    A year later, in 1988, Creative marketed the C/MS via Radio Shack under the name Game Blaster.This card was identical in every way to the precursor C/MS hardware. Whereas the C/MS package came with five floppy disks full of utilities and song files, Creative supplied only a single floppy with the basic utilities and game patches to allow Sierra Online's games using the Sierra Creative ...

  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. Conventional memory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conventional_memory

    SBCONFIG.EXE - support for Sound Blaster 16 audio device; a differently-named driver was used for various other sound cards, also occupying conventional memory. SMARTDRV.EXE - install drive cache to speed up disk reads and writes; although it could allocate several megabytes of memory beyond 640 KB for the drive caching, it still needed a small ...

  9. 86Box - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/86Box

    86Box can emulate some sound cards, such as the AdLib, Sound Blaster (including the Game Blaster), Sound Blaster Pro, Sound Blaster 16, Sound Blaster AWE32, Gravis UltraSound, Innovation SSI-2001, Aztech Sound Galaxy Pro 16, Windows Sound System, Ensoniq AudioPCI 64V/ES1371, and Sound Blaster PCI 128.