ssokolow wrote:dionb wrote:The "vox" bit combined with the 3.5mm (?) jacks and rheostat sounds like it was some kind of voice/audio system, but that hardware... this is almost a whole Mac / Atari ST on an ISA card - computationally more powerful than the XT-class machine it would have been inserted into. As intrigued as you are.
I suspect it to be one of the competitors to the IBM VCA or SpeechViewer cards mentioned in the comments on this post.
That is an interesting link. The SpeechViewer was developed in France. NEC made a "competitor." The time frame seems correct.
It's also interesting because of something else (Oh did I mention the Mystery Board was not alone?) buried in the same pile of debris (I wore nitrile gloves, it was a little "crime scene"), but actually in an odd black plastic bag...
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The backplate was corroded but the board looks okay. No, it's not a modem, it's a Dialectron Smart Answering Machine, Revision 1, from about 1985/86. I found ads and reviews from that time period but I doubt I will find software for it. Apparently it was designed to use your computer to manage answering, calling, messaging, call screening, and... robocalls? Sort of a computerized call center.
I don't know for sure these were used in the same machine, but could this have been a "phone" for the DSP board, which could have been a speech synthesizer? Well, there's no sound input on the SAM, though there's a solder point (apparently never used) for a jack between the phone jacks. There are TH resistors soldered to the back of the board, I don't know if that's normal for this model.
You may have noticed something behind that board, it was the one apparently unmolested by nature in a traditional antistatic bag:
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I mistook it for a serial card at first, especially with the dip switches and toggle switch on the back... but that DB9 is for video. If you look closely at the label, it says copyright 1986 Hewlett-Packard, and 1985 and 86 by... Video 7. The part number lookup from HP (bless 'em) shows a Video 7 Vega EGA card from 1986.
Again, it might have nothing to do with the other cards, but they're all from the same vintage, except maybe the last, a US Robotics modem that is filthy and I haven't fully cleaned it yet. I'm not sure what the extent of the damage is there, but it got wet and dirty while out in the brush.
The limited backstory I had is that someone got a "box of old computer stuff" from someone else and "recycled" it, this was what fell out of the box, unnoticed, to be found later. That was all second-hand, it could have been weeks ago.
I shudder to think about what was in that box.