Reply 20 of 24, by dr.zeissler
sure, but it's very handy to use the built-in speakers of a laptop.
Retro-Gamer 😀 ...on different machines
sure, but it's very handy to use the built-in speakers of a laptop.
Retro-Gamer 😀 ...on different machines
Have you tried running JUDAS on that laptop and fiddling with the mixer settings in that software? Perhaps it supports unmuting the line-in and keeping it open once you exit the application. To be honest, I haven't tried JUDAS myself. I just safeguarded the source code on GitHub with the intent to study how it drives AC'97 and Intel HD Audio hardware from within DOS.
I guess writing a simple unmute tool would be a simple first project to become familiar with programming this kind of modern audio hardware in DOS. It would undoubtedly be much easier than writing or extending a full-fledged Sound Blaster emulator. 😀
Very handy seems to be a dss with a covox or you can go for an opl2lpt, all such things are VERY usefull in plain Dos with a modern system like a notebook.
No I have not tried judas yet.
Retro-Gamer 😀 ...on different machines
I don't what you these for temu303 and vsb103?
wrote:I don't what you these for temu303 and vsb103?
vsb103 is version 1.03 of Virtual Sound Blaster, a Sound Blaster emulator that can output to the internal speaker or a Covox Speech Thing on a parallel port. temu303 is version 3.03 of the Tandy Emulator, which can emulate Tandy, PCjr, PS/1 and even the Disney Sound Source on either the internal speaker or a Covox Speech Thing on a parallel port. See the documentation for more info:
Note: I did not write this code myself The original developer is Andrew Zabolotny (Андрей Заболотный). I published the source code on GitHub with his permission.