Voice Box II (Atari 400/800)

in retrocomputing •  6 years ago  (edited)


http://megalextoria.blogspot.com/2018/05/voice-box-ii-atari-400800.html

It seem that in the 1980s everyone thought that talking computers were the wave of the future. Voice synthesizers were available for just about every platform. It was even in popular movies like Wargames. Of course, the sci-fi idea of talking computers started much earlier.

I had a Commodore 64 and it was capable of some rudimentary voice synthesis without any special devices but it could of course be improved upon with specialized hardware. The device mentioned in this ad from ROM magazine, the Voice Box II, is for the Atari 8-bit line of computers. Advertised features include singing and The Singing Human Face.

In the early home computer era, voice synthesis never became much more than a novelty. But while computers that talk back never really caught on as an every day sort of thing, the idea lives on today in cloud based services like Alexa, Siri, etc. There have also been screen reader programs and various accessibility options that include speech for quite a while now.

Read more: http://www.megalextoria.com/wordpress/index.php/2018/05/22/voice-box-ii-atari-400800/


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Well said. Great memories. Saw this at an Atari user's group meeting.

Definitely ahead of their time, so to speak. As you mentioned, today we have a myriad of digital assistants available that can even do basic computer tasks (search for instance).

I remember hearing the garbled voice in Impossible Mission II on the Commodore 64. That was an awesome time.

Another visitor! Stay awhile...stay forever! Ah ha ha ha ha ha!

That was the first Impossible Mission, I don't remember if it was the same for the 2nd or not...

There was also one for the TI 99/4A.