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Degrees Freedom
Scratch that. Check this.
Nin-tend-hoe.
The Nintendo Entertainment System (often referred to as the NES or simply Nintendo), is an 8-bit video game console released by Nintendo back in the day, in 1985.
Nintendo was the most successful gaming console of it's time. (Nintendo claims to have sold over 60 million NES units worldwide). What a lot of people do not know is that the NES helped revitalize a bit of the US economy, just a bit. The US video game industry experienced what was known as "The video game crash of 1983".
Nintendo set the standard for subsequent consoles in everything from game design to controller layout. But with Nintendo came a new type of sound, a beautiful, prehistoric sound processor:
The NES board supported a total of five sound channels. These included two pulse wave channels of variable duty cycle (12.5%, 25%, 50%, and 75%), with a volume control of sixteen levels, and hardware pitch bending supporting frequencies ranging from 54 Hz to 28 kHz. Additional channels included one fixed-volume triangle wave channel supporting frequencies from 27 Hz to 56 kHZ, one sixteen-volume level white noise channel supporting two modes (by adjusting inputs on a linear feedback shift register) at sixteen preprogrammed frequencies, and one delta pulse-width modulation channel with six bits of range, using 1-bit delta encoding at sixteen preprogrammed sample rates from 4.2 kHz to 33.5 kHz. This final channel was also capable of playing standard pulse-code modulation (PCM) sound by writing individual 7-bit values at timed intervals
What the Fuck does that mean?
I don't know.
Yet if you've ever played a video game in your lifetime, you know that Video Game Music is important.
kayla listening to dj egadz
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