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RealSound. RealSound is a patented (US US5054086 A) technology for the PC created by Steve Witzel of Access Software during the late 1980s. [1] RealSound enables 6-bit [2] digitized pulse-code modulation (PCM)-audio playback on the PC speaker by means of pulse-width modulation (PWM) drive, allowing software control of the loud speaker's ...
The Digital Sound System 80, short DSS80, was a three-piece PC audio system co-developed by Microsoft and Philips. It debuted on the 1998 Electronic Entertainment Expo (EĀ³) and is most likely the only speaker system ever released by the Microsoft Corporation. It also remains one of the very few featuring Philips' wOOx subwoofer technology.
The first of these was the Tandy 2000, a pure MS-DOS compatible machine with no IBM PC ROM BIOS or pretense of PC hardware compatibility. Such machines were common in the early 1980s; the NEC APC is another example. The Tandy 2000 system was similar to the Texas Instruments Professional Computer in that it offered better graphics, a faster ...
The following comparison of audio players compares general and technical information for a number of software media player programs. For the purpose of this comparison, "audio players" are defined as any media player explicitly designed to play audio files, with limited or no support for video playback. Multi-media players designed for video ...
New "Hero" sensor is a completely new sensor developed by Logitech. The sensor is optimized for precision and power efficiency. The mouse has no customizable lighting to increase battery life. 88.9 g (3.14 oz) (mouse only) 112.3 g (3.96 oz) (with 1 AA battery) 135.7 g (4.79 oz) (with 2 AA batteries) G PRO Wireless.
The jury agreed with IPA after a week-long trial that Microsoft's voice-recognition technology violates IPA's patent rights in computer-communications software.
Sound cards for IBM PC compatible computers were very uncommon until 1988. For the majority IBM PC users, the internal PC speaker was the only way for early PC software to produce sound and music. The speaker hardware was typically limited to square waves.
1877ā1971. Speech recognition is at an early stage of development. Specialized devices can recognize few words and accuracy is not very high. [1] 1971ā1987. Speech recognition rapidly improves, although the technology is still not commercially available. [1] 1987ā2014. Speech recognition continues to improve, becomes widely available ...