RetroBrew Computers Forum
Discussion forum for the RetroBrew Computers community.

Home » RBC Forums » General Discussion » General Instrument CTS256A-AL2 vs. Microchip CTS256AL2
Re: DAISY256 works [message #10823 is a reply to message #10794] Mon, 15 July 2024 23:57 Go to previous message
berzerkula is currently offline  berzerkula
Messages: 21
Registered: May 2020
Location: Arkansas, USA
Junior Member
There is a book which may help us, and it has a diagram 1.10

Designing With Speech Processing Chips book by Ricardo Jiménez. He did reference Microchip publication DS5007A-1 1984 but can't find that document anywhere.

  • Attachment: image.png
    (Size: 94.12KB, Downloaded 112 times)


You feel a whole lot more like you do now than you did when you used to.

[Updated on: Wed, 17 July 2024 07:11]

Report message to a moderator

 
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 12:46:22 PDT 2025

Total time taken to generate the page: 0.49672 seconds