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Sound Blaster
(redirected from Soundblaster)

   Also found in: Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.07 sec.

Sound Blaster

A very popular family of sound cards from Creative Labs. In the days of DOS, Sound Blaster was the de facto interface for gaming sounds. Monaural Sound Blaster cards were introduced in 1989, and stereo cards followed in 1992 (Sound Blaster Pro). Wavetable MIDI was added with the 16-bit Sound Blaster AWE32 and AWE64 with 32 and 64 voices. In 1998, Sound Blaster Live was the first PCI-based sound card. Over the years, the Sound Blaster line has been greatly enhanced to provide 3D audio and home theater quality sound directly from a PC. See Creative Labs, DirectSound and OpenAL.

High-End Sound Blaster
This Audigy 4 Pro Sound Blaster card cables to a remote-controlled external hub that supports all major surround sound standards, up to seven speakers and a subwoofer. It provides a wealth of analog and digital inputs and outputs for connecting audio and video equipment and even has ports for MIDI synthesizers and musical instruments.


Driving a Sound Blaster
There are several programming interfaces that applications can use to send sounds to the Sound Blaster card: the Windows DirectSound or earlier MMSystem APIs, or the open source OpenAL. (Illustration courtesy of Creative Labs.)


The Early Days
Before Windows had efficient sound interfaces, DOS applications (mostly games) accessed the Sound Blaster directly. (Illustration courtesy of Creative Labs.)


(hardware)Sound Blaster - The best known family of sound cards for the IBM PC from Creative Labs.



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In fact, the early Soundblaster cards used a Yamaha chip, which was for all intents and purposes the same as the MA-2, allowing 16 voices of 2-operator FM synth.
Dell Dimension 4100 series configurations begin at $1,299 for a system that includes a 733 MHz Pentium III processor, 128 MB of PC133 SDRAM, a 10 GB hard drive, 16 MB ATI Rage 128 Pro graphics card, 48X CD-ROM drive, E770 17-inch monitor (16-inch viewable) and a SoundBlaster Live
Montreal, Ottawa and Toronto media can pick up the signal at the local Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto TOC's on Bell SSO:41987 What you'll need: What you need to "attend" the webcast - -- CPU - Pentium 120 MHz (or greater) -- RAM - 32 MB -- Plug-ins- JavaScript/Java -- Video - SVGA 800x600 screen resolution or higher -- Audio - SoundBlaster audio card (or equivalent) -- Speakers or headphones -- Internet Explorer or Netscape browser v.
 
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