Covox Speech Thing

Covox Speech Thing

Covox Speech Thing
Date invented 1986
Invented by Covox, Inc
Connects to Printer port
Use audio device attached to the computer
Common manufacturers Covox, Disney, others

The Covox Speech Thing (also known as Covox plug) was an external audio device attached to the computer to output digital sound. It was composed of the most primitive 8-bit DAC using a resistor ladder and an analogue signal output, and plugged into the printer port of the PC.

The circuit was marketed around 1986 by Covox, Inc of Eugene, Oregon, for about 70 USD[1] (79.95 USD as of 1989[2]), but as its parts were much cheaper than the complete plug, and as its design was fairly simple, people soon started to build their own variants. The plug was used long into the 1990s, as sound cards were still very expensive at that time. The plug was also quite popular in the demoscene.

An inherent problem of the design is that it requires very precise resistors. If normal parts are used, the values get shuffled, especially for quiet sounds, resulting in distortion. Nevertheless, the sound quality of the Covox plug is far superior compared to the PC speaker; even today, a self-built Covox plug is still an inexpensive way to give old computers sound capabilities.[3]

Commercial products

Features

In its simplest form, Covox received 8-bit, mono signal through the parallel port and produced analog output that could be amplified and played back on loudspeakers. Sampling rate was not fixed by hardware means, and theoretically Covox can support any sampling rate. In practice, however, parallel port speed limits make it rather hard to achieve even standard CD-quality 44100 Hz. Another limiting factor compared to real sound cards was the need to use the computationally demanding timer interrupt to play background music, since there was no direct memory access available.

Advanced versions of Covox-like devices featured:

Compatibility

Games

The Covox plug couldn't directly substitute any of the popular cards of that age (AdLib, Sound Blaster, Gravis Ultrasound, etc.), but several games / platforms supported it directly. Notable entries include:

Music trackers

Popular DOS-based trackers used on demoscene included Covox support, for example:

Emulators

Emulators existed that allowed Covox to act as if there was another soundboard installed:

In reverse, the DOSBox and Fake86 emulators allow to emulate presence of Covox (as Disney Sound Source) on a machine without such physical device connected.[8]

Operating Systems

Several operating systems have a driver for Covox available for install:

References

  1. Göhler, Stefan (March 12, 2003). "Phonomenal! ... a retrospective view the sound card history".
  2. Social Science Microcomputer Review (Duke University Press) 7: 97. 1989. ISSN 0885-0011. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  3. Brychkov, Eugeny (2012). "Adding a multimedia capability: a Covox device" (PDF). AGE Labs. Retrieved 2014-01-20.
  4. Pilgrim, Aubrey (1996). Build Your Own Multimedia PC. McGraw-Hill. p. 282. ISBN 978-0-07-912226-1.
  5. Phillips, Mark. "Some notes on programming for the Disney Sound Source". Archived from the original on January 1, 2007.
  6. The Oldskool PC Carnival Sideshow
  7. DOSBox Wiki: Sound article
  8. Linux driver for Covox by Michael Beck

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, February 13, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.