When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. RTP-MIDI - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RTP-MIDI

    It can then be used to connect a Windows machine with a Macintosh computer, but also embedded systems. As with Apple's driver, the Windows driver creates virtual MIDI ports, which become visible from any MIDI application running on the PC. Access is done through mmsystem layer, like all other MIDI ports.

  3. Master Tracks Pro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Master_Tracks_Pro

    The Windows menu provides access to such for each main MIDI data type (all of which the user can position and size within reasonable limits, which values are stored in its configuration file, PREFER683.MTP, found in MTP's installation directory): A Track Editor that can manage up to 64 tracks. Its hideable left half displays global data for ...

  4. HardSID - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HardSID

    The HardSID USB devices are shipped with Windows drivers for XP/Vista/7 only. Mac OS X support was already worked on but dropped in May 2009, officially due to "lack of/minimal interest" (source: official, now closed Yahoo group) before any (beta) drivers were released.

  5. MPU-401 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MPU-401

    Often, peripherals are able to accept MIDI input through USB and convert it for the traditional DIN connectors. While MPU-401 support is no longer included in Windows Vista, a driver is available on Windows Update. [42] As of 2011, the interface was still supported by Linux and Mac OS X.

  6. Sound card - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound_card

    The USB specification defines a standard interface, the USB audio device class, allowing a single driver to work with the various USB sound devices and interfaces on the market. Mac OS X, Windows, and Linux support this standard. However, some USB sound cards do not conform to the standard and require proprietary drivers from the manufacturer.

  7. Prodikeys - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prodikeys

    The included Windows software communicates with the keyboard driver in order to send and receive MIDI data over the PS/2 line. This protocol has been partly reverse-engineered, [6] making it possible to use the Prodikeys DM on a regular USB port using an Arduino microcontroller as an adaptor.

  8. M-Audio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M-Audio

    Logo. M-Audio was founded in the late 1990s by Tim Ryan, an engineer and graduate of the California Institute of Technology who had co-designed the Con Brio Advanced Digital Synthesizer and helped develop MIDI software for Commodore and Apple computers, including two of the best-selling MIDI software titles at that time, Studio One and Studio Two.

  9. WildMIDI - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WildMidi

    WildMIDI is a free open-source software synthesizer which converts MIDI note data into an audio signal using GUS sound patches without need for a GUS patch-compatible soundcard. WildMIDI, whose aim is to be as small as possible and easily portable, [ 2 ] started in December 2001, [ 3 ] can act as a virtual MIDI device, capable of receiving MIDI ...