LGR wow was somebody really giving you shit 6 years ago?? If they only knew how beloved the oddware series would become. Thank you for all your wonderful content LGR!!!
Oh god, when youtube just decided to fuck up all of it's replies by not making them appear as replies and never bothered to fucking fix it. Good old memories
So glad you never listened to this jerk. Oddware is probably my favorite series of yours. That or tech tales but I just love seeing these strange products I've never heard of that I'd never see without your videos. Keep it up Clint!
Probably the first time in history anyone has used a parallel port DAC with a subwoofer! I do remember seeing circuit schematics for building your own DAC, as well as a parallel port ADC, for digitizing and recording your own sounds, in all their gritty, metallic 8-bit glory.
holy crap, I was expecting really bad chiptunes out of such a simple device. For something you can make yourself, this is unbelievably impressive. Thank you so much for sharing this.
Wow, it's all been made clear now. I see the game composers, the classic EDM crowd and the demoscene influencing each other. Fruitfully. What a seminal time that must have been.
Awesome reviews LGR! Checked out your channel at random and for some reason these retro hardware reviews just tickle the 5-10 year old me messing around with computers in the late 90's early 2000s. You definately earned my subscription!
I was really active in the Amiga / Demo scene back in the 90's I'm surprised I never heard about this. Makes that PC sounds like an Amiga. Good job making this video.
Bro, I love your videos and the fact that you have created playlists for everything you've done makes working so much easier for me. Well, maybe not easier, but it's certainly more bearable and entertaining :D
I fell asleep to this and it put me in a very hazy dream state. I didn't want to get out of bed so I kept going back to sleep. I slept for over 12 hours. It was incredible.
I want Pinball Fantasies solely for that awesome amazing opening... Damn that's some serious opening for a pinball game. Like I am about to witness the best of pinball that is to ever exist.
Same here. The PC speaker usually sounds like crap but Pinball Fantasies used the pc speaker in way that I couldn't believe it wasn't a sound card involved.. From what I recall the pc speaker in pinball fantasies sounded the same as the Covox device in this video.
Yea, Pinball Fantasies was originally an Amiga game, and as such, had MOD music. The PC version got a direct port of that music, using software mixing. It sounds virtually the same on SB, Covox and PC Speaker, because you're essentially listening to the exact same stream of digital samples. PC speaker is slightly lower quality, because it uses the PWM method of sample playback rather than PCM, which only has about 6-bit precision (see RealSound mentioned elsewhere), and can have an audible 'carrier whine' if you have to use a low mixing frequency if your PC is not fast enough. But still, you can make MODs sound quite good on PC speaker, and indeed close to an 8-bit DAC like early SBs or Covox.
This video reminded me how awesome music that game had. I didn't appreciate it as much back then like now I think. I'm tempted to toss some cool mod based music in the mix of mp3s onto my player now...
@5kogur High CPU demands due to lack of DMA, low publisher and developer support, and internal cards like the AdLib (and soon, Sound Blaster) coming along shortly after its release that were more versatile. Those are the biggest reasons I can think of.
Pinball Fantasies has superb sound code. So many different sound hardware options. It can even use the PC speaker (or Adlib) to play the digital audio. I think it even worked quite well on a 286. The programmers of this game did some amazing work.
Rewatching all the oddware/hardware videos, because they are so interesting. Must admit I have learned a lot from you LGR and although I remember having/using computers from the late 80s and on, I can't remember any of the details and it is fun seeing this stuff talked about and explained. Wish I could remember what model my first family computer was, just remember it being a Packard Bell.
Oh my God. Forgive me, I was on subs in the Navy and we used 688I for training. It definitely got the boredom down right followed by five minutes of stark terror. I don't blame you for not playing it. Spent almost six years of my life underwater and underway. Man, that brought back some memories.
@opticburn It's that little DAC only, I swear! Craziness, isn't it? I couldn't believe it myself when I first heard it, it's just insane how awesome it sounds for such a dinky little LPT device.
dude you`re rad!! love your content. and those mod soundtracks demos are so freakin cool.. they all inspired me as a profesional audio engineer these days! Thank you!
How on earth did Pinball Fantasies manage to find the CPU time to render smooth-scrolling graphics like that, while bitbanging audio out the parallel port, on a 386?
This kind of thing came out of the DEMO scene. So they made demo's with smooth scrolling and great sounrds, and figured out that those could be used for gaming. So this kind of game was written *after* the tech was figured out. Of course they would still have had to do this for the PC, after having had the game created for Amiga. Early PC's were rather limited to home computers, which had standard (and standardized) sound and video (of course, the CPU speed, memory layout and expand-ability was much better). The current game computers are a hybrid of both.
3 ปีที่แล้ว +8
I guess it uses VGA register level feature to split screen and scroll, so it needs almost no CPU power at all to do the scrolling. Just the ball and other visible effects should be drawn, and the display at the bottom. Surely, if CPU should refresh all the screen in the name of scrolling, it wouldn't be so simple case. So, I guess, a 386 is more than enough for this.
the idea of a LPT DAC is so simple yet giving great results, even for real wav sound. the only thing that might break down speed and performance is the fact that it uses the cpu for conversion of the sound data.
I understand what youre saying about how crappy the sound was on the pc speaker, but personally I just love it. it has so much charm and i just love it.
@JonteP0nte Yes, it's a big strain on the CPU. That's why I had to play the songs at something like 11khz. You can achieve higher rates the faster the CPU is.
I knew I had heard it before, and had it in my collection! The pesky thing was hiding among about 6000 tracks, and I would never be able to find it if it wasn't for you. Thanks a lot, man.
Man i love mod audio. I used to have a lot of cdroms with thousands of mod files on them, and I would just spend hours browsing through them and listening, on my old 486.
Angry bird at 26:26 , you make the best videos on the internet of this variety. Other videos can be too short, and not in detail without the hosts opinion. and you actually have a sense of humor, too.
This thing is seriously great. Such a simple, dare I say crude (not in a bad sense) device that allowed for such great sound! People must've flipped out back then hearing it. Flipped right out! Well, maybe not, but it is still cool. And it plugs into the parallel port! Awesome!!
Love this kind of "primitive" engineering where somebody wires a couple of resistors together and suddenly we're in another galaxy (compared to the PC-speaker). An A/B test would have been fun, just to illustrate the dramatic difference; straight from PC-speaker to COVOX on Pinball Fantasies :)
It's worh saying that the PC speaker could be run with PCM drivers, then the sound was a lot better. No where close to covex, but still, something that could play actually was sounds. There even was hackad windows 3.1 drivers to do it in windows. The main issue is that unlike the parallel port that at least could buffer up the next output. For the PC speaker the CPU need to precise controll every movment of the speaker. This took even more cpu power. To the amount that the windows drivers totqly locked up windows. But it could be used in pinball games with no issue.(on a 486)
@LoticaStudios I don't have a DSS yet, but I hope to get one and cover it here eventually. The circuitry and logic is a bit different from the Speech Thing from what I gather.
I gotta say this thing is fascinating that something like this even exists i never heard of it till today, if I ever seen one I'll pick it up, would be pretty cool to own!
I built one of these "Covox" devices, and still use it occasionally for entertainment and some audio fun. There's a few "tracker" programs that also use it, I believe. So, you can actually create the music that you are hearing, but it's a bit of a geeky interface - takes awhile to get used to it. Perhaps I should do a video showing a few things I have that run on it.
Awesome vids dude..keep up the great work..been binge wattching over the last few months..seeing how your channel has grown and how you have aged lo.l...greetz from the uk...
The Speech Thing idea lives on, at least to a certain degree, in today's USB sound cards. The Speech Thing is VERY impressive when you consider how simple it is though.
@ModernDoomer89 I agree, the name is just fantastic. It does its job of keeping the device memorable, too! I still wanna grab a DSS, since it doesn't seem to be really compatible with the Speech Thing, and vice versa.
@surfingthechaos Well, what I meant was that you don't have to install any drivers. It still needs a driver as far as I know, which the games that utilized it often came with. COVOX.DRV or something like that is in the game directory, chosen via the game setup. So for Windows, you do need a driver. I have some drivers for Windows 3.x, but I'm not sure if they would work on Win7 or not. That would be freaking sweet if they did, and I'd test it myself but my modern PC doesn't have a parallel port.
It took a few dozen episodes to realize you were a scener! Let's hear it for observation! When you demo'd the CMS/Game Blaster, am I right to think you also compose music? Perhaps even, tracked music? Heh. You showed excellent taste here, too! Thanks for posting these fun videos!
Pinball Fantasies had sound effects because it was onto the .mod itself with the music, so instead opening separated files, the game just opens the .mod and plays everything.Also, PBF sounds good even with the pc speaker, it's awesome.
I am stunned that this music is coming out of a printer port. Think about it. This is a printer port. Making music. Great music. Wow. Whoever invented this is a genius. Whoever complained about the low sound quality - THIS IS A PRINTER PORT!!!
Wow, I had forgotten how awesome so much of the music from back then was. It really made flying a spaceship/saving the world/stacking blocks feel like an epic journey.
@Robloxian182 You could likely use it with a Widows driver to play back WAV files and such, but I'm not sure what else. I have a Windows driver for the thing, PM me if you want it. I haven't tried the Speech Thing with Windows yet, but questions like yours have made me curious!
ahh cool mod music, kinda forgot about it. amazing what you could do with only 4 channels of sound. thinking about the amiga mainly. Keep on the good work phreakindee
Every Digital sound can be convert to covos. At the "93 I had software " comak. exe" which I convert main file which I run the game. This software could direct the sound to LPT covox. So I converted game another world to covox.
You should cut in that depth dweller audio whenever you thank someone in one of your videos. You did that on one of your first videos, and it was awesome haha.
Heh, well yeah it was really called that, I don't just make up products to review :) It was a thing that produced speech, why not? I dunno, maybe their marketing team wasn't very creative. Or maybe it was, it's a pretty unique name.
@naomikimpenu No, that's literally something that happens in the game. They have this chick Gear now and someone tries to trade her for bacon as part of the story. I didn't even know you were female.
Well if this isn't mind blowing i don't know what is :D Being an old amiga musician and very familiar with the amiga sound system and mod files. I really did not expect that good sound when you booted up Pinball Fantasies. I used to play this _a lot_ on amiga back in the day :) Awesome!
sigh.. another game I have (shamefully) forgotten as time has passed.. if not for anything else; the music I should have remembered in this little jewel of my pasts gaming x.x
@ImperialProductions I know, right? I assume its low usage was due mostly to its lack of DMA, resulting in lots of CPU load, and publishers being approached by and eventually utilizing Adlib instead.
@TeamRocketReviews You should be able to use them with a Tandy, so long as you installed a card with a game port. I actually still have the original Gravis Analog Joystick, boxed and everything! Love Gravis hardware.
Cool, I built one of those in college ages ago. Seeing this made me go dig it out of my drawer of old crap just to see if I still had it. Got the whole thing stuffed inside a Foxconn (!) DB25 shroud.
(Almost verbatim) Speech Thing is a digital-to-analog SPEECH SYNTHESIZER. The hardware component attaches in-line to the parallel printer port and does not interfere with printer operation. The software consists of a talking calculator, a talking blackjack game, a music sampler keyboard, a graphics-based sound editor, a special effects control panel, and prerecorded sounds for inclusion in user-written programs. Also included is a copy of SmoothTalker from First Byte.
I had a home made Covox in the mid of 90ties. That jump from PC speaker to another sound galaxy was awesome. I still remember the first test. :D There was a special tsr program which allowed you to use this DA with some of the games which were using the sampled sounds. Like Ishar 1 and 2, Metal Mutant, some sierra adventure games, etc. Even Disney sound source was possible to use in Wolfestein. :D I just can't remember anymore the name of that SW. In the times, when I had already the CD burner, I had also SB16, Covox was already in the hand of my brother in law and I didn't backup on the CDs that SW :( . But it was really clever TSR program.
I was trying to find how I found out about Space Debris again. THIS IS THE VIDEO! But in all seriousness, I was trying to find the video that introduced me to Space Debris and I have found it. Space Debris is possibly my all-time favorite MOD file. :)
There was an external speech synthesizer for the Apple II that was designed as an accessibility peripheral for blind and visually impaired people. The voice was the standard 80s Stephen Hawking but it actually worked pretty damn well and was surprisingly responsive and quick. I used it throughout elementary school but couldn’t tell you the model number. Definitely worth investigating if any of them is still floating around somewhere, although ancient accessibility tech must be nigh impossible to find.
I used to love Inertia Player, but it seemed to have issues with tuning with some formats. It was pretty though. And then Cubic Player dropped, and forever ruined me for all other mod players. Yeah, those were indeed the days.
Lifting up an old video :-). Funniest thing happened in 2005 when I was driving car and turned on the car radio. I couldn’t believe the music from 3D Mark 05 was playing! That was when the composer of ”Space Debris” Markus Kaarlonen, a.k.a. ”Kapu” (eng. Captain), had put out first record with their latest band Poets Of The Fall. That was the song ”Lift” (titled ”Lift Me Higher” in the end credits of 3D Mark 05).
I remember building one of these from a diagram in a magazine back in the day and using it on my 386sx25, then playing pinball fantasies and being in absolute awe at the fact that the little machine could play that game in a strange semi high-resolution non-standard VESA mode (wasnt it like 320x400??) with smooth scrolling and output reasonable quality digital audio over a parallel port simultaneously.. and not even frameskip
@TeamRocketReviews I've seen some Gravis sticks for the Apple II, like the Mark VI. Their analog joysticks are quite nice, although really I'm not fond of their gamepads. Never liked the feel of the D-pad, even on their later versions like the Gamepad Pro.
Great demo! A few years ago I had a Disney Sound Source, and for fun I setup a Pentium PC with that installed along with Windows 3.11. I never played any good games on it, but it was setup to play MP3's, and had a nic card to surf the net on DSL. I'm surprised how simple the hardware is, and how much better it sounded compared to GameBlaser as well as Tandy Sound. A game that used one of the above for effects, and music on Covox would have it the spot.
@MobyGamer Hehe, I wish I had a real Speech Thing to show! The software in particular interests me, and I've seen the box in that video you uploaded a while back. It looks awesome, I'd love to see the contents.
The song at 19:20 is used in Pgen (PS2 homebrew Sega Genesis emulator). It sounds a lot better on the PS2. I always thought that it was made for that emulator, but I sure was wrong. :) Or, just find it on TH-cam. ;)
Kevin Jacquot I know. Thanks anyway. By the way, you are a bit late (by a few years). Thanks to the much-needed G+ integration, you can post full TH-cam links (and other links too).
Also probably the first time anyone played "Acid Jazzed Evening" on a Covox, although I did hear some distortion on that MOD, maybe due to the aforementioned resistors.
@rastaxp I'll go one better: I'm currently working on a pretty lengthy video about Jazz Jackrabbit, its history, its gameplay, its relation to the Gravis Gamepad, and a review of each version of the original game. How's that sound?
Pinball Fantasies sounds awesome on PC speaker as well! There is some magic in that program: I remember playing it for the first time on my 486SL over a decade ago, I did not have a sound card but my PC was playing music!!!
@Dirik619 Thing is, a lot of other people are enjoying these. And I enjoy making them. If you don't like them, don't watch. Problem solved.
LGR wow was somebody really giving you shit 6 years ago?? If they only knew how beloved the oddware series would become. Thank you for all your wonderful content LGR!!!
Oh god, when youtube just decided to fuck up all of it's replies by not making them appear as replies and never bothered to fucking fix it. Good old memories
So glad you never listened to this jerk. Oddware is probably my favorite series of yours. That or tech tales but I just love seeing these strange products I've never heard of that I'd never see without your videos. Keep it up Clint!
@@tolentarpay5464 Pretty sure he did...the comment is 9 years old! lmao
@@DumbArse It was astounding how long Google took to fix the TH-cam comments after they royally fucked them for no reason at all.
Thanks, awesome to hear! I hope you continue to enjoy, lots of retro goodness coming in the future.
And lots of retro goodness we have here in 2020! 🤘
Probably the first time in history anyone has used a parallel port DAC with a subwoofer! I do remember seeing circuit schematics for building your own DAC, as well as a parallel port ADC, for digitizing and recording your own sounds, in all their gritty, metallic 8-bit glory.
holy crap, I was expecting really bad chiptunes out of such a simple device. For something you can make yourself, this is unbelievably impressive. Thank you so much for sharing this.
Space Debris is one of my favorite pieces of mod music ever, hear it all the time on TH-cam.
Bangin' soundtrack.
19:06: Space Debris
24:14 What is Funk?
26:47 Acid Jazz Evening
Wow, it's all been made clear now. I see the game composers, the classic EDM crowd and the demoscene influencing each other. Fruitfully.
What a seminal time that must have been.
Awesome reviews LGR! Checked out your channel at random and for some reason these retro hardware reviews just tickle the 5-10 year old me messing around with computers in the late 90's early 2000s. You definately earned my subscription!
I was really active in the Amiga / Demo scene back in the 90's I'm surprised I never heard about this. Makes that PC sounds like an Amiga.
Good job making this video.
Bro, I love your videos and the fact that you have created playlists for everything you've done makes working so much easier for me. Well, maybe not easier, but it's certainly more bearable and entertaining :D
I fell asleep to this and it put me in a very hazy dream state. I didn't want to get out of bed so I kept going back to sleep. I slept for over 12 hours. It was incredible.
@HarryMatic Good to know, thank you!
Space Debris. One of my favorite mods that I'd play on my Amiga all the time. Kinda funny to hear it again like this.
WHY IS THIS MUSIC SO EXTREMELY GROOVY?!
Per Kristian
WHY AM I SO SMOL
Maybe Because it was copied from a phonograph record?😆 Remember records are groovy but CDs are the pits.
I want Pinball Fantasies solely for that awesome amazing opening... Damn that's some serious opening for a pinball game. Like I am about to witness the best of pinball that is to ever exist.
I remember being amazed by the Pinball Fantasies audio back in the day when everything else was using AdLib effects.
Same here. The PC speaker usually sounds like crap but Pinball Fantasies used the pc speaker in way that I couldn't believe it wasn't a sound card involved..
From what I recall the pc speaker in pinball fantasies sounded the same as the Covox device in this video.
Yea, Pinball Fantasies was originally an Amiga game, and as such, had MOD music. The PC version got a direct port of that music, using software mixing. It sounds virtually the same on SB, Covox and PC Speaker, because you're essentially listening to the exact same stream of digital samples. PC speaker is slightly lower quality, because it uses the PWM method of sample playback rather than PCM, which only has about 6-bit precision (see RealSound mentioned elsewhere), and can have an audible 'carrier whine' if you have to use a low mixing frequency if your PC is not fast enough. But still, you can make MODs sound quite good on PC speaker, and indeed close to an 8-bit DAC like early SBs or Covox.
This video reminded me how awesome music that game had. I didn't appreciate it as much back then like now I think. I'm tempted to toss some cool mod based music in the mix of mp3s onto my player now...
And to think that game was made by the studio that now makes Battlefield.
@5kogur High CPU demands due to lack of DMA, low publisher and developer support, and internal cards like the AdLib (and soon, Sound Blaster) coming along shortly after its release that were more versatile. Those are the biggest reasons I can think of.
This sounds amazing. I didn't expect it to sound so good.
Pinball Fantasies has superb sound code. So many different sound hardware options. It can even use the PC speaker (or Adlib) to play the digital audio. I think it even worked quite well on a 286. The programmers of this game did some amazing work.
Rewatching all the oddware/hardware videos, because they are so interesting. Must admit I have learned a lot from you LGR and although I remember having/using computers from the late 80s and on, I can't remember any of the details and it is fun seeing this stuff talked about and explained. Wish I could remember what model my first family computer was, just remember it being a Packard Bell.
I built one for my 386SX back in the day using a simple resistor network. MOD files sounded a lot better!
Oh my God. Forgive me, I was on subs in the Navy and we used 688I for training. It definitely got the boredom down right followed by five minutes of stark terror. I don't blame you for not playing it.
Spent almost six years of my life underwater and underway. Man, that brought back some memories.
@opticburn It's that little DAC only, I swear! Craziness, isn't it? I couldn't believe it myself when I first heard it, it's just insane how awesome it sounds for such a dinky little LPT device.
dude you`re rad!! love your content. and those mod soundtracks demos are so freakin cool.. they all inspired me as a profesional audio engineer these days! Thank you!
@GeoNeilUK It may have been, I'm actually not sure. I know a lot of the MOD files I have were originally created for the Amiga.
How on earth did Pinball Fantasies manage to find the CPU time to render smooth-scrolling graphics like that, while bitbanging audio out the parallel port, on a 386?
It was written in pure assembly on the PC. Possibly the best Amiga to PC port of all time. Not for the weak of heart.
Actually it runs smooth on my 286@12mhz with lpt sound as well.
This kind of thing came out of the DEMO scene. So they made demo's with smooth scrolling and great sounrds, and figured out that those could be used for gaming. So this kind of game was written *after* the tech was figured out.
Of course they would still have had to do this for the PC, after having had the game created for Amiga. Early PC's were rather limited to home computers, which had standard (and standardized) sound and video (of course, the CPU speed, memory layout and expand-ability was much better). The current game computers are a hybrid of both.
I guess it uses VGA register level feature to split screen and scroll, so it needs almost no CPU power at all to do the scrolling. Just the ball and other visible effects should be drawn, and the display at the bottom. Surely, if CPU should refresh all the screen in the name of scrolling, it wouldn't be so simple case. So, I guess, a 386 is more than enough for this.
Old comment I know, but
You should try pinball fantasies with just the pc speaker.. also plays amazing and sound effects!
the idea of a LPT DAC is so simple yet giving great results, even for real wav sound.
the only thing that might break down speed and performance is the fact that it uses the cpu for conversion of the sound data.
@Dirik619 Happy to be of service!
I understand what youre saying about how crappy the sound was on the pc speaker, but personally I just love it. it has so much charm and i just love it.
@JonteP0nte Yes, it's a big strain on the CPU. That's why I had to play the songs at something like 11khz. You can achieve higher rates the faster the CPU is.
Space Debris is a cool song.
Space Debris!!!
I had this file searched for eons, Thanks!
i love the mod files
I knew I had heard it before, and had it in my collection! The pesky thing was hiding among about 6000 tracks, and I would never be able to find it if it wasn't for you. Thanks a lot, man.
Thanks to your channel I rediscovered my love for retro games and my Saturday rocks! :)
Oh man Acidjazzed Evening
Man i love mod audio. I used to have a lot of cdroms with thousands of mod files on them, and I would just spend hours browsing through them and listening, on my old 486.
@waymuu "Space Debris" by Captain is the first MOD, "What Is Funk?" is the second MOD, "Acidjazzed Evening" is the third MOD.
Angry bird at 26:26 , you make the best videos on the internet of this variety. Other videos can be too short, and not in detail without the hosts opinion. and you actually have a sense of humor, too.
This video is now almost old enough to be oddware itself.
It's is now
Me in 2023 looking at your comment from 5 years ago. Now I can tell you this video is definitely an oddware haha
This thing is seriously great. Such a simple, dare I say crude (not in a bad sense) device that allowed for such great sound! People must've flipped out back then hearing it. Flipped right out! Well, maybe not, but it is still cool. And it plugs into the parallel port! Awesome!!
Love this kind of "primitive" engineering where somebody wires a couple of resistors together and suddenly we're in another galaxy (compared to the PC-speaker). An A/B test would have been fun, just to illustrate the dramatic difference; straight from PC-speaker to COVOX on Pinball Fantasies :)
It's worh saying that the PC speaker could be run with PCM drivers, then the sound was a lot better. No where close to covex, but still, something that could play actually was sounds. There even was hackad windows 3.1 drivers to do it in windows.
The main issue is that unlike the parallel port that at least could buffer up the next output. For the PC speaker the CPU need to precise controll every movment of the speaker. This took even more cpu power.
To the amount that the windows drivers totqly locked up windows. But it could be used in pinball games with no issue.(on a 486)
It's an NCR Comten 386SX, there's a video of on my channel.
@LoticaStudios I don't have a DSS yet, but I hope to get one and cover it here eventually. The circuitry and logic is a bit different from the Speech Thing from what I gather.
I gotta say this thing is fascinating that something like this even exists i never heard of it till today, if I ever seen one I'll pick it up, would be pretty cool to own!
Holy crap the memories this video evoked. I recognize everything. Loved this music back then. Still do now that I hear it again.
I built one of these "Covox" devices, and still use it occasionally for entertainment and some audio fun. There's a few "tracker" programs that also use it, I believe.
So, you can actually create the music that you are hearing, but it's a bit of a geeky interface - takes awhile to get used to it.
Perhaps I should do a video showing a few things I have that run on it.
@Clearstarsummer They're listed in the video description. You can just download and play the MOD files using the links provided.
Awesome vids dude..keep up the great work..been binge wattching over the last few months..seeing how your channel has grown and how you have aged lo.l...greetz from the uk...
Wow that music is awesome! Also, love the spider at 27:55 ;p
"acidjazzed evening". You can read it at 26:45
The Speech Thing idea lives on, at least to a certain degree, in today's USB sound cards. The Speech Thing is VERY impressive when you consider how simple it is though.
@ModernDoomer89 I agree, the name is just fantastic. It does its job of keeping the device memorable, too! I still wanna grab a DSS, since it doesn't seem to be really compatible with the Speech Thing, and vice versa.
The inertia player music you're playing reminds me of very good old Amiga times.
thanks!
@surfingthechaos Well, what I meant was that you don't have to install any drivers. It still needs a driver as far as I know, which the games that utilized it often came with. COVOX.DRV or something like that is in the game directory, chosen via the game setup.
So for Windows, you do need a driver. I have some drivers for Windows 3.x, but I'm not sure if they would work on Win7 or not. That would be freaking sweet if they did, and I'd test it myself but my modern PC doesn't have a parallel port.
Such a simple and elegant construction!
@ff5x2 Out of This World/Another World supports the Disney Sound Source, which is rather similar to the Speech Thing, but it is not compatible.
It took a few dozen episodes to realize you were a scener! Let's hear it for observation! When you demo'd the CMS/Game Blaster, am I right to think you also compose music? Perhaps even, tracked music? Heh. You showed excellent taste here, too!
Thanks for posting these fun videos!
Pinball Fantasies had sound effects because it was onto the .mod itself with the music, so instead opening separated files, the game just opens the .mod and plays everything.Also, PBF sounds good even with the pc speaker, it's awesome.
I am stunned that this music is coming out of a printer port.
Think about it. This is a printer port. Making music. Great music. Wow.
Whoever invented this is a genius.
Whoever complained about the low sound quality - THIS IS A PRINTER PORT!!!
@R33Racer It's the Oddware sound! Truthfully I don't remember. I recorded it a long time ago and recently found on a backup disc.
Acidjazzed Evening is by far one of my favorite c64 tunes. the mod version is pretty sweet too.
Wow, I had forgotten how awesome so much of the music from back then was.
It really made flying a spaceship/saving the world/stacking blocks feel like an epic journey.
@Robloxian182 You could likely use it with a Widows driver to play back WAV files and such, but I'm not sure what else. I have a Windows driver for the thing, PM me if you want it. I haven't tried the Speech Thing with Windows yet, but questions like yours have made me curious!
@Psyke89PT Sounds awesome! Haven't tried it yet, but I certainly will soon.
ahh cool mod music, kinda forgot about it. amazing what you could do with only 4 channels of sound. thinking about the amiga mainly. Keep on the good work phreakindee
I owned a Covox Jr. for the C64. Speech recognition in 1988!!!
Every Digital sound can be convert to covos. At the "93 I had software
" comak. exe" which I convert main file which I run the game. This software could direct the sound to LPT covox. So I converted game another world to covox.
You should cut in that depth dweller audio whenever you thank someone in one of your videos. You did that on one of your first videos, and it was awesome haha.
This just sounds awesome. I love it !
Heh, well yeah it was really called that, I don't just make up products to review :)
It was a thing that produced speech, why not? I dunno, maybe their marketing team wasn't very creative. Or maybe it was, it's a pretty unique name.
@serginietor I know it was big in the computer music demo scene, as shown in this video with the MOD files and all that.
Oh my gosh - Pinball Fantasies had such a cool soundtrack. I remember playing it on Amiga.
@naomikimpenu No, that's literally something that happens in the game. They have this chick Gear now and someone tries to trade her for bacon as part of the story. I didn't even know you were female.
I played StarControl 2 with it , it was freakin awesome
Nice reviews dude!
Well if this isn't mind blowing i don't know what is :D
Being an old amiga musician and very familiar with the amiga sound system and mod files. I really did not expect that good sound when you booted up Pinball Fantasies. I used to play this _a lot_ on amiga back in the day :)
Awesome!
@rthijssen84 That it does. Still, it's pretty crazy what you can get the PC speaker to pull off, if only barely!
I don't know much about the oddware here but dang, those songs are now in my head for years to come.
sigh.. another game I have (shamefully) forgotten as time has passed..
if not for anything else; the music I should have remembered in this little
jewel of my pasts gaming x.x
@ImperialProductions I know, right? I assume its low usage was due mostly to its lack of DMA, resulting in lots of CPU load, and publishers being approached by and eventually utilizing Adlib instead.
@TeamRocketReviews You should be able to use them with a Tandy, so long as you installed a card with a game port. I actually still have the original Gravis Analog Joystick, boxed and everything! Love Gravis hardware.
@Segadude3000 I have now! Sounds a lot like the Iomega drives that were so popular at the time.
Cool, I built one of those in college ages ago. Seeing this made me go dig it out of my drawer of old crap just to see if I still had it. Got the whole thing stuffed inside a Foxconn (!) DB25 shroud.
(Almost verbatim) Speech Thing is a digital-to-analog SPEECH SYNTHESIZER. The hardware component attaches in-line to the parallel printer port and does not interfere with printer operation. The software consists of a talking calculator, a talking blackjack game, a music sampler keyboard, a graphics-based sound editor, a special effects control panel, and prerecorded sounds for inclusion in user-written programs. Also included is a copy of SmoothTalker from First Byte.
Sounds great! Really reminds me of the Amiga.
I had a home made Covox in the mid of 90ties. That jump from PC speaker to another sound galaxy was awesome. I still remember the first test. :D There was a special tsr program which allowed you to use this DA with some of the games which were using the sampled sounds. Like Ishar 1 and 2, Metal Mutant, some sierra adventure games, etc. Even Disney sound source was possible to use in Wolfestein. :D I just can't remember anymore the name of that SW. In the times, when I had already the CD burner, I had also SB16, Covox was already in the hand of my brother in law and I didn't backup on the CDs that SW :( . But it was really clever TSR program.
I was trying to find how I found out about Space Debris again. THIS IS THE VIDEO! But in all seriousness, I was trying to find the video that introduced me to Space Debris and I have found it. Space Debris is possibly my all-time favorite MOD file. :)
There was an external speech synthesizer for the Apple II that was designed as an accessibility peripheral for blind and visually impaired people. The voice was the standard 80s Stephen Hawking but it actually worked pretty damn well and was surprisingly responsive and quick. I used it throughout elementary school but couldn’t tell you the model number. Definitely worth investigating if any of them is still floating around somewhere, although ancient accessibility tech must be nigh impossible to find.
New favorite reviewer.
+1 for seeing the Inertia Player again. Those were the days :)
I used to love Inertia Player, but it seemed to have issues with tuning with some formats. It was pretty though.
And then Cubic Player dropped, and forever ruined me for all other mod players. Yeah, those were indeed the days.
Lifting up an old video :-). Funniest thing happened in 2005 when I was driving car and turned on the car radio. I couldn’t believe the music from 3D Mark 05 was playing! That was when the composer of ”Space Debris” Markus Kaarlonen, a.k.a. ”Kapu” (eng. Captain), had put out first record with their latest band Poets Of The Fall. That was the song ”Lift” (titled ”Lift Me Higher” in the end credits of 3D Mark 05).
They have made some nice pieces of music on this thing!
I remember building one of these from a diagram in a magazine back in the day and using it on my 386sx25, then playing pinball fantasies and being in absolute awe at the fact that the little machine could play that game in a strange semi high-resolution non-standard VESA mode (wasnt it like 320x400??) with smooth scrolling and output reasonable quality digital audio over a parallel port simultaneously.. and not even frameskip
@TeamRocketReviews I've seen some Gravis sticks for the Apple II, like the Mark VI. Their analog joysticks are quite nice, although really I'm not fond of their gamepads. Never liked the feel of the D-pad, even on their later versions like the Gamepad Pro.
That is some... ridiculously epic-sounding music for a PINBALL GAME COLLECTION. :D
Great demo! A few years ago I had a Disney Sound Source, and for fun I setup a Pentium PC with that installed along with Windows 3.11. I never played any good games on it, but it was setup to play MP3's, and had a nic card to surf the net on DSL. I'm surprised how simple the hardware is, and how much better it sounded compared to GameBlaser as well as Tandy Sound. A game that used one of the above for effects, and music on Covox would have it the spot.
@MobyGamer Hehe, I wish I had a real Speech Thing to show! The software in particular interests me, and I've seen the box in that video you uploaded a while back. It looks awesome, I'd love to see the contents.
@mistamontiel You can hear the whole song here: watch?v=wTLhWXv2I4A
The song at 19:20 is used in Pgen (PS2 homebrew Sega Genesis emulator). It sounds a lot better on the PS2. I always thought that it was made for that emulator, but I sure was wrong. :)
Or, just find it on TH-cam. ;)
***** also it was used in a game called need for madness
+awesomeferret watch?v=thnXzUFJnfQ
Kevin Jacquot I know. Thanks anyway. By the way, you are a bit late (by a few years). Thanks to the much-needed G+ integration, you can post full TH-cam links (and other links too).
+awesomeferret Wow thanks for pointing that out, was already wondering where I knew it from :)
The music for the stones n bones sounds amazing
+Justin Dotson so phat
So awesome music! The quality was amazing too! X3
I did not expect something so simple to sound that good...
Also probably the first time anyone played "Acid Jazzed Evening" on a Covox, although I did hear some distortion on that MOD, maybe due to the aforementioned resistors.
@rastaxp I'll go one better: I'm currently working on a pretty lengthy video about Jazz Jackrabbit, its history, its gameplay, its relation to the Gravis Gamepad, and a review of each version of the original game. How's that sound?
Pinball Fantasies sounds awesome on PC speaker as well!
There is some magic in that program: I remember playing it for the first time on my 486SL over a decade ago, I did not have a sound card but my PC was playing music!!!