Sound Chip Synth: Difference between revisions

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'''[http://www.soundonsound.com/sos/1997_articles/dec97/ataridec97.html Sound Chip Synth]''' by Electronic Cow was released in 1996 as shareware, and was Electronic Cow's first release, and first in a series of similiar, albeit different titled products. Not a Sample Editor in the truest sense, moreover Sound Chip Synth is a Wavetable Generator. It allows the creation of your own sounds via common periodoc [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waveform waveforms]. i.e Sine, Square, Sawtooth and Triangle waveforms, and works in the same way as an analogue mono synthesiser, as it's design suggests. Therefore the user can adjust the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_oscillator Oscillators] including the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Low-frequency_oscillation LFO], [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Variable-gain_amplifier VCA], Noise, [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amplitude_modulation Amplitide Modulation] and the Envelope. Sounds can be generated in 8 or 16-bit, up to a frequency of 48 kHz. Sound Chip Synth can be played over MIDI, and sounds can be saved in native SYN file format, or saved as a sample in AVR, AIFF or SPL file formats. There were technically three versions of Sound Chip Synth, irrespective of sub versions, and lossely speaking, was developed for all TOS computers.
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'''[http://www.soundonsound.com/sos/1997_articles/dec97/ataridec97.html Sound Chip Synth]''' by Electronic Cow was released in 1996 as shareware, and was Electronic Cow's first release, and first in a series of similiar, albeit different titled products. Not a Sample Editor in the truest sense, moreover Sound Chip Synth is a Wavetable Generator. It allows the creation of your own sounds via common periodoc [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waveform waveforms]. i.e Sine, Square, Sawtooth and Triangle waveforms, and works in the same way as an analogue mono synthesiser, as it's design suggests. Therefore the user can adjust the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_oscillator Oscillators] including the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Low-frequency_oscillation LFO], [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Variable-gain_amplifier VCA], Noise, [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amplitude_modulation Amplitide Modulation] and the Envelope. Sounds can be generated in 8 or 16-bit, up to a frequency of 48 kHz. Sound Chip Synth can be played over MIDI, and sounds can be saved in native SYN file format, or saved as a sample in AVR, AIFF or SPL file formats. There were technically three versions of Sound Chip Synth, irrespective of sub versions, and loosely speaking, was developed for all TOS computers.
   
   

Revision as of 13:05, 23 April 2016

Sound Chip Synth by Electronic Cow was released in 1996 as shareware, and was Electronic Cow's first release, and first in a series of similiar, albeit different titled products. Not a Sample Editor in the truest sense, moreover Sound Chip Synth is a Wavetable Generator. It allows the creation of your own sounds via common periodoc waveforms. i.e Sine, Square, Sawtooth and Triangle waveforms, and works in the same way as an analogue mono synthesiser, as it's design suggests. Therefore the user can adjust the Oscillators including the LFO, VCA, Noise, Amplitide Modulation and the Envelope. Sounds can be generated in 8 or 16-bit, up to a frequency of 48 kHz. Sound Chip Synth can be played over MIDI, and sounds can be saved in native SYN file format, or saved as a sample in AVR, AIFF or SPL file formats. There were technically three versions of Sound Chip Synth, irrespective of sub versions, and loosely speaking, was developed for all TOS computers.



Overview

  • Name: Sound Chip Synth
  • Type: Wavetable Generator
  • Sample Format: 8 and 16 bits
  • Sample Rate: Up to 48 kHz
  • Sound Quality: Mono
  • Hardware ADC: N/A
  • ADC Connection Type: N/A


--Atari74user 13:55, 23 April 2016 (CEST)


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