7

Dial-a-SID

 2 years ago
source link: http://www.linusakesson.net/hardware/dial-a-sid/index.php
Go to the source link to view the article. You can view the picture content, updated content and better typesetting reading experience. If the link is broken, please click the button below to view the snapshot at that time.

Dial-a-SID

I rebuilt an old bakelite phone into a jukebox for SID tunes. Here's a video about it!

Posted Sunday 4-Jul-2021 23:31

Discuss this page

Disclaimer: I am not responsible for what people (other than myself) write in the forums. Please report any abuse, such as insults, slander, spam and illegal material, and I will take appropriate actions. Don't feed the trolls.

Jag tar inget ansvar för det som skrivs i forumet, förutom mina egna inlägg. Vänligen rapportera alla inlägg som bryter mot reglerna, så ska jag se vad jag kan göra. Som regelbrott räknas till exempel förolämpningar, förtal, spam och olagligt material. Mata inte trålarna.

Anonymous
Mon 5-Jul-2021 16:12
Fantastic user interface :D

/P
lollipopman
Jesse W Hathaway
Wed 7-Jul-2021 22:26
Really awesome! Thanks so much for the wonderful video and the great reuse of some old tech for a fun new purpose!
Anonymous
Fri 9-Jul-2021 10:56
Hi

Lets say I would like to reproduce this without modifying my phone. Would it be possible to make an external box with the extra two buttons to implement the same functionality?

/P
b_jonas
Thu 15-Jul-2021 00:47
The rotary dial has the digit 0 on the shortest travel path, the fastest digit to dial, faster than even the digit 1. On a real telephone, 0 is on the other end of the dial, the one that's slowest to dial, beyond the digit 9. This ruins part of the illusion of an old telephone for me.
ralph
Ralph Corderoy
Thu 15-Jul-2021 14:26

b_jonas wrote:

The rotary dial has the digit 0 on the shortest travel path, the fastest digit to dial, faster than even the digit 1. On a real telephone, 0 is on the other end of the dial, the one that's slowest to dial, beyond the digit 9.
This varied by country. Anti-clockwise, variations included 1234567890, 0123456789, and even 9876543210.
ralph
Ralph Corderoy
Thu 15-Jul-2021 14:29
Hi Linus, I don't think the microphone is being used? Speech recognition sounds a bit boring. One could whistle commands down it as a nod to phreaking. Or how about whistling a melody to select a matching chiptune. :-)

I thought the video could have described the Pi's connections to the phone a bit more.
Anonymous
Sat 17-Jul-2021 16:31
Just found this. Amazing Linus! Have you seen Jens Christian Huss' sidfactory II? - check it out!
Anonymous
Sun 25-Jul-2021 16:17
The best thing since sliced bread! Next version should use SAM speech :)

About Joyk


Aggregate valuable and interesting links.
Joyk means Joy of geeK