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  2. Elektor TV Games Computer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elektor_TV_Games_Computer

    The Elektor TV Games Computer (TVGC) was a programmable computer system sold by Elektor in kit form from April 1979. [1] [2] It used the Signetics 2650 CPU [2] with the Signetics 2636 PVI for graphics and sound.

  3. E-mu Systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E-mu_Systems

    After its acquisition in 1993, E-mu Systems was a wholly owned subsidiary of Creative Technology, Ltd. [1] In 1998, E-mu was combined with Ensoniq, another synthesizer and sampler manufacturer previously acquired by Creative Technology. [1] E-mu was last based in Scotts Valley, California, on the outskirts of Silicon Valley. [1]

  4. E-mu Proteus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E-mu_Proteus

    Two Proteus modules, the Xtreme Lead-1 and the Mo-Phatt, sit atop an Akai multi-track recorder, together forming a system typical of Hip hop production. The E-mu Proteus was a range of digital sound modules and keyboards manufactured by E-mu Systems from 1989 to 2002.

  5. HERO (robot) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HERO_(robot)

    Like HERO 1, HERO Jr. has a 6808 processor, but only 2 kB of RAM. It has onboard speech synthesis , a Polaroid sonar range sensor, a light sensor, a sound sensor, and an optional infrared sensor. Other optional components include a pair of extra batteries to double the operational time between charges, from an estimated 4 hours to 8 hours.

  6. E-mu Emax - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E-mu_Emax

    E-mu Emax (1986) The Emax was a line of samplers, developed, manufactured, and sold by E-mu Systems from 1986 to 1995. Sold alongside their more expensive Emulator II and III samplers, the Emax line was conceived after the release of the Akai S-612 and Sequential Prophet 2000, and was designed to compete for the lower end of the sampling market.

  7. OpenEmu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenEmu

    OpenEmu 2.1 (Friday, October 15, 2019, 675 days after version 2.0.6.1; "coincidentally," exactly 5 years after the 1.0.4 Stella update) was significant, not for any new cores, but for supporting Metal, Apple's visual API successor to OpenGL and OpenCl, giving OpenEmu significant gains in both performance and battery life.

  8. E-mu Emulator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E-mu_Emulator

    E-mu Systems was founded in 1971 as a manufacturer of microprocessor chips, digital scanning keyboards and components for electronic instruments.Licensing revenue for this technology afforded E-mu the ability to invest in research and development, and it began to develop boutique synthesizers for niche markets, including a series of modular synthesizers and the high-end Audity system, of which ...

  9. MSX - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MSX

    The Spectravideo SV-328 is the predecessor of the MSX standard. Many MSX programs were unofficially ported to the SV-328 by home programmers. In the early 1980s, most home computers manufactured in Japan such as the NEC PC-6001 and PC-8000 series, Fujitsu's FM-7 and FM-8, and Hitachi's Basic Master featured a variant of the Microsoft BASIC interpreter integrated into their on-board ROMs.