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  2. Yamaha Portasound - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yamaha_Portasound

    VST plug-in soft-synth versions of some of these keyboards have also been released by various developers, including the Yamaha PSS-170 and PSS-480 by Audio Animals, [9] [10] GSS-370 (based on the PSS370 keyboard) [11] and PortaFM.

  3. List of Yamaha Corporation products - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Yamaha_Corporation...

    Magna Organ introduced in 1935, [7] [8] was a multi-timbral keyboard instrument invented in 1934 by a Yamaha engineer, Sei-ichi Yamashita. It was a kind of electro-acoustic instrument, an acoustic instrument with additional electronic circuits for sound modification.

  4. Yamaha YM2151 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yamaha_YM2151

    The Yamaha YM2151, also known as OPM (FM Operator Type-M) is an eight-channel, four-operator sound chip developed by Yamaha. It was Yamaha's first single-chip FM synthesis implementation, being created originally for some of the Yamaha DX series of keyboards (DX21, DX27, and DX100 [1]). Yamaha also used it in some of their budget-priced ...

  5. Keyboard expression - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keyboard_expression

    On some keyboards—a good example of such an instrument being Yamaha's programmable synthesiser-workstation, the Yamaha EX5 [1] [2] [3] —the player can select the effects to which aftertouch applies. This allows a performer to custom-tailor the effect that they desire. It may also facilitate the imitation of various non-keyboard instruments.

  6. Acoustic cryptanalysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acoustic_cryptanalysis

    Acoustic cryptanalysis is a type of side channel attack that exploits sounds emitted by computers or other devices.. Most of the modern acoustic cryptanalysis focuses on the sounds produced by computer keyboards and internal computer components, but historically it has also been applied to impact printers, and electromechanical deciphering machines.

  7. Yamaha Reface - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yamaha_Reface

    The CP has six sound models taken from Yamaha's CP4 stage piano: a Rhodes Mk.1, a Rhodes Mk.2, a Wurlitzer, a Clavinet, a Yamaha CP80 and a toy piano. [9] The keyboard has a maximum polyphony of 128 notes. The Reface CP also has an effects engine that includes drive, phaser, tremolo, delay, reverb and chorus effects. [12]

  8. Yamaha PSR-E323 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yamaha_PSR-E323

    The keyboard contains a scaled-down version of Yamaha's Advanced Wave Memory (AWM) tone generation system, which is a PCM sample-based synthesis engine. The samples are an adaptation of Yamaha's earlier PortaTone series of home keyboards produced between 1997 and 2006, as well as the MU-series sound modules produced from 1994 to 2002.

  9. Frequency modulation synthesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frequency_modulation_synthesis

    Yamaha's DX7 synthesizer, released in 1983, was ubiquitous throughout the 1980s. Several other models by Yamaha provided variations and evolutions of FM synthesis during that decade. [13] Yamaha had patented its hardware implementation of FM in the 1970s, [10] allowing it to nearly monopolize the market for FM technology until the mid-1990s.