RetroBrew Computers Forum
Discussion forum for the RetroBrew Computers community.

Home » RBC Forums » General Discussion » General Instrument CTS256A-AL2 vs. Microchip CTS256AL2
Re: General Instruments CTS256A-AL2 vs. Microchip CTS256AL2 [message #10334 is a reply to message #10321] Sat, 06 May 2023 16:46 Go to previous messageGo to previous message
scruss is currently offline  scruss
Messages: 62
Registered: December 2015
Location: Toronto, Canada
Member

jayindallas wrote on Fri, 28 April 2023 16:10

Microchip may have seen the CTS as a necessary augment to sell the SPO which they liked enough as a product to invest time and money to develop the CTS algorithm, or more economically purchase it from someone who had created a good algorithm
Neither. It uses the public domain algorithm developed by the US Naval Laboratories.

In other fun speech news, the full source for DECTalk was made available a while back: https://github.com/dectalk/dectalk


> Does anyone know what each of the pins on the 6502 CPU chip in the Apple II Plus does?
They all plug into the socket on the motherboard to keep the chip from drifting away. - c.s.a2 FAQ of yore
 
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Read Message
Previous Topic: Dave Runkle's front panel for the SBC6120-RBC
Next Topic: Resurrecting EaZy80, a forgotten glue-less 22MHz Z80 SBC.


Current Time: Sat Sep 27 23:25:00 PDT 2025

Total time taken to generate the page: 0.00759 seconds