
Thursday, February 01, 2007
10 comments:
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© Matrixsynth - All posts are presented here for informative, historical and educative purposes as applicable within fair use.
MATRIXSYNTH is supported by affiliate links that use cookies to track clickthroughs and sales. See the privacy policy for details.
MATRIXSYNTH - EVERYTHING SYNTH
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So, it appears to be a standard VIA-chipset motherboard with a minimum of custom hardware. Makes one wonder how hard it would be to revive the project...
ReplyDeletenow thats really interesting
ReplyDeleteThats a standard micro-atx pc mother board inside that. I'll bet the HN runs on either Linux or QNX
ReplyDeleteIt has 256MB of ram and is using 133Mhz commodity PC ram. Check this photo http://www.sequencer.de/pix/hartmann/RAM_256MB.jpg then check this photo http://www.sequencer.de/pix/hartmann/Mainboard_IO.jpg
ReplyDeleteYou see your standard P2/2 keyboard and mouse ports, usb ports, ethernet rj45, something connected to the serial port - probably the controls, nothing in the video port, nothing in the audio port - probably used something better than the cheesy sound blaster clone on the mother board. Gosh, what did people pay for these things?
Somebody should hook a pc keyboard, pc mouse and a pc monitor up to theirs and see what is one the display. Probably a linux login prompt.
ReplyDeleteThis is crying out to be open sourced....
ReplyDeleteBwaaaaahahaha..
ReplyDeleteHuh,hurm hum,im happy thath i never have buy this sh*t... :)
Nothing wrong with building things on a PC mobo. Except the constant crashing of course.
ReplyDeleteSoftware crashes. Hardware fails. I'm sure sure PC motherboards are known for failure.
ReplyDeleteWell, you don't just pay for the motherboard, right? Software takes time to develop, and so does all the custom hardware that's in there (besides the mobo of course).
ReplyDelete--th