Examples of using Adlib in English and their translations into Korean
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Ecclesiastic
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Programming
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Computer
AdLib Multimedia.
File Format: AdLib Tracker 2 File.
AdLib Music Synthesizer.
In 1989, we were at a time where the Adlib was the standard in DOS!
The Adlib Theater Company.
The IBM PC is the most prominent example, and the AdLib Music Synthesizer card is another.
The AdLib IBM Music Feature.
As a result, dealing in PC Speakers and not the Sound Blaster or even the Adlib.
AdLib six Roland and Covox.
For some obscure reason, they have not put music adlib and put instead of PC Speakers that Pierce ears!
The AdLib Music Synthesizer Card.
Same goes for music and sound effects†In 1989,we were at a time where the Adlib was the standard in DOS!
AdLib Personal Music System IBM Music Feature Card.
To conclude, the interest of this game lies only in the fact that it is first to have used the ADLib chipset for a PC/DOS game.
The AdLib Music Synthesizer Card, was one of the first sound cards circa 1990.
One of the first manufacturers of sound cards for the IBM PC was AdLib, who produced a card based on the Yamaha YM3812 sound chip, aka the OPL2.
The AdLib used the Yamaha YM3812 chip- which anyone could buy- to produce sound.
And level sound effects, well this is the same principle of why the presence of sound in PC Speakers instead of using the Adlib/ Sound Blasterâ€.
The AdLib used Yamaha's YM3812 sound chip which produces sound via FM synthesis.
One of the first manufacturers of sound cards for the IBM PC was AdLib, which produced a card based on the Yamaha YM3812 sound chip, also known as the OPL2.
The AdLib generated music with a Yamaha YM3812 chip, which produced sound through FM synthesis.
Traffic Department 2192 supported only PC speaker and AdLib/Sound Blaster sound, possibly because the composer didn't have access to high-end MIDI hardware.
The AdLib lacked the ability to produce true stereo audio or play digital sound samples of any kind.
When composers utilized the low end of the Game Blaster's range,they could create rich, full music that was every bit as compelling as AdLib music in its own way.
All sounds produced by the AdLib card were completely dry, lacking environmental effects of any kind.
AdLib set an early defacto standard for sound cards in 1987, with its card based on the Yamaha YM3812 sound chip.
Since this is a game of 1991, we talk about the time of the Adlib sound cards, so before the time where the Sound Blaster became a standard, even if it already existed.
Some of the best AdLib music was composed by demoscene members and shareware game companies, perhaps because their smaller budgets made purchasing the expensive Roland hardware impossible.
Sound Blaster became the new standard for computer audio, and although AdLib's follow-up- the AdLib Gold- was superior, AdLib lacked Creative Labs' marketing skills and was forced to file for bankruptcy in 1992.
The company was renamed AdLib Multimedia and relaunched the AdLib Gold sound card and many other products.
