Strange Demo screens
Moderators: Mug UK, lotek_style, Moderator Team
- karlm
- Atari Super Hero
- Posts: 713
- Joined: Thu Nov 13, 2003 4:09 am
- Location: Top of the World - Australia
bullis1:
here is the original text for you.
For everyone trying to work out what this is...
An A/D converter is in essence a bunch of resistors in parallel, which sort of works like a nut grader. The signal goes in and if it fits through the small hole, a small sound comes out, if it's too big, it goes to the next hole, and so on.
A D/A converter does exactly the opposite, it combines all the signals into one, this is why you can either elect to solder in a D/A chip or make your own 'chip' as above. The resistor version may not be as crisp as the chip version, but it has the benefit of nearly everyone able to lay their hands on a bunch of resistors...
and as a bonus, here is a link for those using a windows box to be able to see the ascii in all it's glory:
http://www.softpedia.com/get/Office-too ... ewer.shtml
cheers
karlm.
here is the original text for you.
For everyone trying to work out what this is...
An A/D converter is in essence a bunch of resistors in parallel, which sort of works like a nut grader. The signal goes in and if it fits through the small hole, a small sound comes out, if it's too big, it goes to the next hole, and so on.
A D/A converter does exactly the opposite, it combines all the signals into one, this is why you can either elect to solder in a D/A chip or make your own 'chip' as above. The resistor version may not be as crisp as the chip version, but it has the benefit of nearly everyone able to lay their hands on a bunch of resistors...
and as a bonus, here is a link for those using a windows box to be able to see the ascii in all it's glory:
http://www.softpedia.com/get/Office-too ... ewer.shtml
cheers
karlm.
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
Alright, that text file is great. The information within is written for PCs, but the circuit schematics look like they will work fine on Atari. A parallel port is a parallel port, as they say.
Thanks for the file, karlm! It was a good read, and the ASCII schems look fine when I view them in MSDOS Edit.
Thanks for the file, karlm! It was a good read, and the ASCII schems look fine when I view them in MSDOS Edit.
Sorry for my late reply.karlm wrote:cool. Soldering iron coming out tonight
which demos should I try Gunstick?
cheers
karlm
Just wade through this list
http://www.cpu.lu/ulm/demoarchive/
and grab axelf, fastload, lifesabitch (not shure though, the possible candidate being the fullscreen), miamivice, oxygen_v2, paranoimia, paulaabdul, rendezvous, september, starrtrck, streethawk, tourisk, ulm_ny (the zoolook screen) and maybe even ulm93
Georges
Doesn't TCB Tracker/Audio sculpture support this too?
I take it this is essentially like a Monster sound cartridge only in mono?
I wish I'd known about this mod before I got my STE, LOL!
That's something else for the emulator coders to add in along with MV16,Playback Cartridge/Replay Emulation.
I take it this is essentially like a Monster sound cartridge only in mono?
I wish I'd known about this mod before I got my STE, LOL!
That's something else for the emulator coders to add in along with MV16,Playback Cartridge/Replay Emulation.
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
('< o o o o |''| STM,2xSTFM,2xSTE+HD,C-Lab Falcon MK2+HD,Satandisk,Ultrasatandisk,Ethernat.
- Mug UK
- Administrator
- Posts: 11542
- Joined: Thu Apr 29, 2004 7:16 pm
- Location: Stockport (UK)
- Contact:
Any chance of you making one but taking proper photos of each step? Then upload it in a tutorial form for the Wiki?bullis1 wrote:Any other trackers that support such a device out there?
It's a really easy and fun device to make.
My main site: http://www.mug-uk.co.uk - slowly digging up the bits from my past (and re-working a few): Atari ST, Sega 8-bit (game hacks) and NDS (Music ripping guide).
I develop a free Word (for Windows) add-in that's available for Word 2007 upwards. It's a fix-it toolbox that will allow power Word users to fix document errors. You can find it at: http://www.mikestoolbox.co.uk
I develop a free Word (for Windows) add-in that's available for Word 2007 upwards. It's a fix-it toolbox that will allow power Word users to fix document errors. You can find it at: http://www.mikestoolbox.co.uk
It was "La Cucaracha".guythp wrote: The disk drive grinding was on the amiga, some demo played the american anthem or somethign silly like that.. As we all remember it had a god awfully loud floppy. I was very nearly honestly scared the first time I heard my mates amiga chugging away at a game - I looked at him to see if something was wrong, but all seemed normal.. Don't let SainT's flopppy emulation fool you, the ST's was whisper quiet in comparison.
Quite horrible to hear, since it could hurt the floppy head.
I'm sorry Mug! I didn't see this reply when you made it!muguk wrote: Any chance of you making one but taking proper photos of each step? Then upload it in a tutorial form for the Wiki?
I can take photos of the internals, but I do not plan on making another one because it uses up a lot of resitors, which I do not have many of. I don't think I'd be the best candidate for writing the wiki article anyway. My circuitry work never looks pretty

Yup it's legit but nothing clever going on. Simply set your HP ScanJet to SCSI ID 0 and power on with the Scan button held in. It's an Easter Egg on the device.muguk wrote:Don't know if that's 100% legit as some of the sound could have been added afterwards (the advent of YouTube and similar sites has caused me a lot of cyncism - everyone wants 15 minutes of fame!) but if it's 100% legit then that's a good video (and a dead scanner!)
Pretty Cool Though. Amongst other HP scanners you can find Beethoven's Ode to Joy as well as Vivaldi's Spring (1st Movement)
STE: Desktopper case, IDE interface, UltraSatan (8GB + 512Mb) + HXC floppy emulator. Plus some STE's/STFM's
- Mug UK
- Administrator
- Posts: 11542
- Joined: Thu Apr 29, 2004 7:16 pm
- Location: Stockport (UK)
- Contact:
Well I never knew that!
Surely it must damage the scanner head in some way - mind you, if it's an Easter Egg then I guess HP wouldn't have put it in there to do damage.
Hopefully neither of my two scanners do that as they were damned expensive to buy
Surely it must damage the scanner head in some way - mind you, if it's an Easter Egg then I guess HP wouldn't have put it in there to do damage.
Hopefully neither of my two scanners do that as they were damned expensive to buy

My main site: http://www.mug-uk.co.uk - slowly digging up the bits from my past (and re-working a few): Atari ST, Sega 8-bit (game hacks) and NDS (Music ripping guide).
I develop a free Word (for Windows) add-in that's available for Word 2007 upwards. It's a fix-it toolbox that will allow power Word users to fix document errors. You can find it at: http://www.mikestoolbox.co.uk
I develop a free Word (for Windows) add-in that's available for Word 2007 upwards. It's a fix-it toolbox that will allow power Word users to fix document errors. You can find it at: http://www.mikestoolbox.co.uk
I tried out Audio Sculpture today using my parallel-port DAC. It worked a charm! However, the truly amazing thing is that Audio Sculpture lets you use a parallel port DAC and a replay cartridge at the same time, allowing for stereo composing on a plain ST! I was pretty blown away! It also allows you to use many other combinations of devices for stereo playback. I think Audio Sculpture is my new favourite digi tracker. It also successfully replayed some old .mod files that have failed to play in any other player/tracker on PC or ST!MiggyMog wrote:Doesn't TCB Tracker/Audio sculpture support this too?
I take it this is essentially like a Monster sound cartridge only in mono?
I wish I'd known about this mod before I got my STE, LOL!
That's something else for the emulator coders to add in along with MV16,Playback Cartridge/Replay Emulation.
Yeah, it can load TCB tracker mods & also supports a custom packed version which shows the instument as'PACK!' or simmilar when loaded in other trackers, the save as dialogue has the pack on/off function so make sure it is off!.It also successfully replayed some old .mod files that have failed to play in any other player/tracker on PC or ST!
Be wary when saving though, it doesn't save protracker compatible, it saves some data in a .INF file with the same filename as the.MOD.
This means any looped samples don't loop when loaded in to pro-tracker compatible trackers & you have change the loop start /sample end after importing.
I had started scanning the manual in for audio sulpture a while back, has anyone else done it already, or does anyone want me to finish the job?

Have you found the built in speech synthesizer yet bullis?, you have to right click copy IIRC in the sample menu?
('< o o o o |''| STM,2xSTFM,2xSTE+HD,C-Lab Falcon MK2+HD,Satandisk,Ultrasatandisk,Ethernat.
A bit late in responding to this, but I just saw it now. I remember hearing a couple of different sounds from my old STFM drive - the cracked custom filesystem versions I had of Saint Dragon (right at the start) and, I think, SWIV (which crashed like 90% through the game, cluck!) both made some funny noises loading chunks from the floppy.guythp wrote: The disk drive grinding was on the amiga, some demo played the american anthem or somethign silly like that.. As we all remember it had a god awfully loud floppy. I was very nearly honestly scared the first time I heard my mates amiga chugging away at a game - I looked at him to see if something was wrong, but all seemed normal.. Don't let SainT's flopppy emulation fool you, the ST's was whisper quiet in comparison.
Also, some PD file/disk utility I had at some stage tried to format the floppy it was on, but since it had the write protect tab on, just clicked through each track loudly - sounded like someone dragging a stick along a fence.
Maybe some of these were disk specific, but I think it's possible to make some interesting noises by accessing the floppy in a dodgy manner.
BTW: Saint Dragon had some nifty music, too! Pity the tunes were so short and restarted on death (which, in that game, was about every 20 seconds) though.
tá'n poc ar buile!
Thank you very very much for these tips! I've never searched for the manual yet, but if you plan on scanning it I'd print it out as soon as I got my hands on it. I'd appreciate it if you did finish the scan.MiggyMog wrote:Yeah, it can load TCB tracker mods & also supports a custom packed version which shows the instument as'PACK!' or simmilar when loaded in other trackers, the save as dialogue has the pack on/off function so make sure it is off!.It also successfully replayed some old .mod files that have failed to play in any other player/tracker on PC or ST!
Be wary when saving though, it doesn't save protracker compatible, it saves some data in a .INF file with the same filename as the.MOD.
This means any looped samples don't loop when loaded in to pro-tracker compatible trackers & you have change the loop start /sample end after importing.
I had started scanning the manual in for audio sulpture a while back, has anyone else done it already, or does anyone want me to finish the job?
Have you found the built in speech synthesizer yet bullis?, you have to right click copy IIRC in the sample menu?
@Desty: Saint Dragon is a very cool game with great tunes, but I do wish someone would do a trainer that prevented you from dying. I'll be honest and say I've never beaten it, but I'd love to see the last half of the game without constantly losing my powerups and hearing the music restart.
I'd love to get my hands on a copy of audiosculpture, because all mods I ever made I made in TCB tracker.. and apparently Audiosculpture is the ONLY program anywhere that can convert these to anything compatible with anything else. It would mean I can finally publish my (admittedly lame) music on my homepage in a mod format playable for other people =)
UK 1040 STF, SE kbd, SE tos 1.04, gotekHxC+floppy B internally, ATX psu on the side
DE Mega 1
SE Mega 2, no keyboard
SE Mega ST 4
Megafile 20 with 2 MFM drive mechanisms (80+20 meg) in hacked case, ATX psu on the side
Megafile 30
Megafile 60
SH 204
SM124, SM125, Samsung SyncMaster 930mp 19 inch 4:3 lcd tv rgbscart and VGA for STHIgh
PC Intel i5 8G ram many disks
5xRaspberry pi
DE Mega 1
SE Mega 2, no keyboard
SE Mega ST 4
Megafile 20 with 2 MFM drive mechanisms (80+20 meg) in hacked case, ATX psu on the side
Megafile 30
Megafile 60
SH 204
SM124, SM125, Samsung SyncMaster 930mp 19 inch 4:3 lcd tv rgbscart and VGA for STHIgh
PC Intel i5 8G ram many disks
5xRaspberry pi
Audio Sculpture can be downloaded at http://dhs.nu/files_msx_digi.php
Enjoy! However, there are some caveats with Audio Sculpture that are detailed above in this thread.
Enjoy! However, there are some caveats with Audio Sculpture that are detailed above in this thread.
Damn right, even with infinite lives I never managed to beat the damn game.bullis1 wrote:@Desty: Saint Dragon is a very cool game with great tunes, but I do wish someone would do a trainer that prevented you from dying. I'll be honest and say I've never beaten it, but I'd love to see the last half of the game without constantly losing my powerups and hearing the music restart.
Now that I mention it, I remember playing it in MAME so I could hear the rest of the cool soundtrack and see the ending, but even with the "invincibility" cheat I ended up dying in ridiculously crowded levels somehow and never finished it

Thankfully, programs like M1 and such came along so I could listen to it anyway

tá'n poc ar buile!
- GT Turbo
- Captain Atari
- Posts: 335
- Joined: Tue Feb 17, 2004 9:41 am
- Location: Alsace, France
- Contact:
Re: Strange Demo screens
Zerosquare do it !!!!alexh wrote: Stepper Motor Music. Playing tunes / noise by using the motor in the floppy disk drive.
Look this video
GT

- SkylineDave
- Atari Super Hero
- Posts: 606
- Joined: Tue Sep 20, 2005 2:18 pm
- Location: Leicester
- Contact:
ha! thats brilliant!
AKA Megadaz / Black Eagle --- STOS, Dungeon Master and Captive fan!
Developer of DemoBaseST
Developer of DemoBaseST
- alexh
- Fuji Shaped Bastard
- Posts: 2826
- Joined: Wed Oct 20, 2004 1:52 pm
- Location: UK - Oxford
- Contact:
Re: Strange Demo screens
Heh, that's not real is it?
I am sure the "music" I remember being played with the stepper motor was recognisable, but no where near that good.
I am sure the "music" I remember being played with the stepper motor was recognisable, but no where near that good.
- GT Turbo
- Captain Atari
- Posts: 335
- Joined: Tue Feb 17, 2004 9:41 am
- Location: Alsace, France
- Contact:
Re: Strange Demo screens
It's real, yes the disk drive is dead like the disk, but it's real, be sure.alexh wrote:Heh, that's not real is it?
I am sure the "music" I remember being played with the stepper motor was recognisable, but no where near that good.
Zerosquare is a great coder and a specialist in sound and video. He isn't know in Atari world, because he come from the PC world

http://www.jagware.org/index.php?s=&sho ... ost&p=3832
This year you will see some other code from him on Atari this time !!
GT
