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Welcome to Oldschooldaw.com! (Online since 2014) serving vintage computers worldwide! this is our NEW WEBHOST as we've moved from our OLD GODADDY to a brand new server location to start off 2026. thanks to Godaddy for hosting the site for 11 years and a big thank you to IONOS.COM for the great pricing going forward!

Recent Posts

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91
Hardware Samplers & MPCs / Re: roland s- series samplers
« Last post by smoot smooth.as.silk on July 03, 2025, 10:25:36 AM »
You can find a lot of software and sound files of the original Roland samplers on this site https://www.sgroup.ca (sgroup.ca - Roland Sampler Users Group)

Editor for the Roland S-10 MKS-100 and S-220 https://www.sgroup.ca/archive/utilities/s10/s10manager/

I myself still have a Roland S-220 & S-330. The 220 with a virtual USB drive. Also an LCD screen connected to the S-330 with mouse. Roland made beautiful industrial designs in the years 1988/94 in my opinion. A lot of old stuff still works. Sometimes the capacitors need to be replaced or the power supply. Otherwise very stable. Hardware nowadays seems to be of much lower quality.
92

Roland JV Patch with JV-XP EDITOR

This is a perfect free editor for the JV series.
I use this myself for my JV-1080

Download can be found in the youtube movie


93
General / Miscellaneous / cpu slot type organized by release date (year)
« Last post by chrisNova777 on July 02, 2025, 08:37:55 AM »
Intel:
Socket 7 (1995): Supported Intel Pentium and AMD K6 processors.
Slot 1 (1997): Used for Intel Pentium II and Pentium III processors.
Socket 370 (1999): Used for Intel Pentium III and Celeron processors.
Socket 423 (2000): Used for Intel Pentium 4 processors.
Socket 478 (2001): Replaced Socket 423 for Intel Pentium 4 and Celeron processors.
LGA 775 (2004): Also known as Socket T, used for Intel Core 2 Duo, Core 2 Quad, and Pentium Dual-Core processors.
LGA 771 (2006): Primarily for Intel Xeon processors.
LGA 1366 (2008): Introduced Intel Nehalem microarchitecture.
LGA 1156 (2009): Replaced LGA 775 for some Intel processors.
LGA 1155 (2011): Used for Intel Sandy Bridge and Ivy Bridge processors.
LGA 2011 (2011): Used for Intel high-end desktop and server processors.
LGA 1150 (2013): Used for Intel Haswell and Broadwell processors.
LGA 1151 (2015): Used for Intel Skylake and Kaby Lake processors.
LGA 2066 (2017): Used for Intel Core i9, i7, and Xeon processors.
LGA 1151-v2 (2017): Minor revision of LGA 1151.
LGA 1200 (2020): Used for Intel Comet Lake and Rocket Lake processors.
LGA 1700 (2021): Used for Intel Alder Lake and Raptor Lake processors.


AMD:
Socket 7 (1995): Supported AMD K6 processors.
Socket A (2000): Used for AMD Athlon and Duron processors.
Socket 754 (2003): Used for AMD Athlon 64 processors.
Socket 939 (2004): Used for AMD Athlon 64 and Athlon 64 X2 processors.
Socket AM2 (2006): Introduced support for DDR2 memory.
Socket AM2+ (2007): Improved power management and HyperTransport 3.0.
Socket F (2007): Server socket for AMD Opteron processors.
Socket AM3 (2009): Introduced support for DDR3 memory.
Socket AM3+ (2011): Supported AMD FX series processors.
Socket FM1 (2011): Used for AMD A-Series APUs.
Socket FM2 (2012): Used for AMD A-Series APUs.
Socket FM2+ (2014): Used for AMD A-Series APUs.
Socket AM1 (2014): Used for low-power AMD Athlon and Sempron processors.
94
General / Miscellaneous / Re: Hi - OldSchoolDaws4Life
« Last post by G40 on June 12, 2025, 04:32:02 PM »
Hey everyone - I just wanted to introduce myself. I'm a Canadian electronic musician. I've been on here for several years but couldn't contribute due to registration issues.  That seems to have worked itself out so I was finally able to join!

Part of my interest in music making is building and using outdated equipment to create my songs and releases, so naturally oldschooldaw is the perfect place for me to get some of my info. I'm really grateful that this site exists! Thank you @chrisNova777. What you've collected here is incredible. It's a huge contribution to preserving information that really is disappearing with time. I hope to help fill in any gaps I can.

I thought I'd make my first post about about a recent hardware build I completed. This was a 386 based midi sequencer running the MidiLand MPU-401 clone and legit copies of Cubase 1.0, 1.0 Score, and Cakewalk 2. The main thrust of this project was recovering the first generative album ever made, Brian Eno's 'Generative Muisic 1', which was released on floppy in 1996. It runs off a Sound Blaster AWE32 / SB32 set up, which is installed in this system. I managed to stream a few generative sessions for people to hear and enjoy. It's a really unusual unicorn album that needed to be preserved. It got lost with time and no one really did anything to save it.





Very cool, thanks for sharing.
95
iOS Smartphones (iPhones) / is 5g wifi the same as 5g cellular?
« Last post by chrisNova777 on June 05, 2025, 10:18:38 AM »
NO!

96
iOS Smartphones (iPhones) / first iphone to support 5g?
« Last post by chrisNova777 on June 05, 2025, 10:14:29 AM »
is the iphone 12

https://www.5gworldpro.com/blog/2023/04/20/which-iphones-support-5g/
heres a list

Quote
iPhone Model   5G Ready
iPhone 14   Yes
iPhone 14 Plus   Yes
iPhone 14 Pro   Yes
iPhone 14 Pro Max   Yes
iPhone SE (2022)   Yes
iPhone 13   Yes
iPhone 13 Mini   Yes
iPhone 13 Pro   Yes
iPhone 13 Pro Max   Yes
iPhone 12   Yes
iPhone 12 Mini   Yes
iPhone 12 Pro   Yes
iPhone 12 Pro Max   Yes
iPhone 11 Pro / 11 Pro Max   No
iPhone 11   No
iPhone SE 2020   No
iPhone XS / XS Max   No
iPhone X / XR   No
iPhone 8 or 8 Plus   No
iPhone 7 / 7 Plus   No

re: iphone SE 1st, 2nd + 3rd generation:
Quote
Yes, the iPhone SE (3rd generation), released in 2022, is 5G compatible. It supports 5G Sub-6GHz networks, which are widely available. Older iPhone SE models, including the 1st and 2nd generation, are not 5G compatible.
97
General / Miscellaneous / Re: Hi - OldSchoolDaws4Life
« Last post by SoftAutomaton on June 02, 2025, 09:20:59 AM »
I've never seen or used one. I would try an new thread for that question. Maybe someone on here has one.
98
General / Miscellaneous / Re: Hi - OldSchoolDaws4Life
« Last post by SoftAutomaton on May 29, 2025, 09:25:49 AM »
The AWE32/SB32 and AWE64 product lines are perfectly good cards but they have a higher noise floor. I don't know the db number but it's audible. Yes- you could record with it and that's sort of how they were marketed but I wouldn't call them "Pro". I'm about to receive an SPDIF addon for the card in the 386. That will eliminate the whole conversion, at least with regards to the source material. I'm looking forward to hearing the difference.
99
General / Miscellaneous / Re: Hi - OldSchoolDaws4Life
« Last post by SoftAutomaton on May 27, 2025, 11:21:22 AM »
All fair points. I'm about to start building a Pentium 1 with the EMU APS sound card. We'll see how that sounds soon. The computer I'm starting with is in rough shape so it will take a while but I hope to post some audio examples with the APS as soon as I can. That's some reasonably old DSP at work too.
100
General / Miscellaneous / Re: Hi - OldSchoolDaws4Life
« Last post by SoftAutomaton on May 26, 2025, 09:14:15 AM »
re lively vs lifeless sounds:

I would make the case that you are referring to different DACs/ADCs and opamp choices vs the code in drivers. The driver is only a bridge which instructs the DSP and DAC to do its job. It may not have any material impact on sonic characteristics.  As such, those hardware amd component decisions made by the manaufacturerer result in different harmonics (or lack thereof), which changes our perception of this warm / cold argument.

An excellent example of how you can actually see this at work would be to watch a movie on laserdisc vs DVD (hard to do these days, I know. check rips for a close proximity of what I'm describing). You will see that the DACs on laserdisc were lower bitrate and cruder which may result in a better theatre-like - let's call it warmer - visual experience. As these DACs refined, so did the visual definition of the film.

This is partly why I have enjoyed, even preferred using some older gear (whether it's a synth, effect, or audio interface). The components of their time couldn't reduce noise or harmonics in the same way. Conversely, I really like the SSL superanalogue audio channel strips that tie to their interfaces. These are incredibly transparent and low noise. They sound amazing and have none of the noisy characteristics that I love from the older sound cards and equipment.
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