“There is no gratitude, no encouragement – just entitled behavior and grift”.
A signature element of many classic home computer games from the ’80s is the use of MIDI music, and dwhinham‘s mt32-pi was intended as a tribute to that iconic sound.
Billed as a “baremetal MIDI synthesizer for the Raspberry Pi 3”, mt32-pi was intended to serve as a “dedicated emulation of the famous multi-timbre sound module used by countless classic MS-DOS, PC-98 and Sharp X68000 games,” and was shaping up to be a pretty promising project. It could even be combined with a MiSTer FPGA for truly authentic sound.
Read the full article on timeextension.com
“There is no gratitude, no encouragement – just entitled behavior and grift”.
A signature element of many classic home computer games from the ’80s is the use of MIDI music, and dwhinham‘s mt32-pi was intended as a tribute to that iconic sound.
Billed as a “baremetal MIDI synthesizer for the Raspberry Pi 3”, mt32-pi was intended to serve as a “dedicated emulation of the famous multi-timbre sound module used by countless classic MS-DOS, PC-98 and Sharp X68000 games,” and was shaping up to be a pretty promising project. It could even be combined with a MiSTer FPGA for truly authentic sound.
Read the full article on timeextension.com