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Retro | Speak & Spell Electronic Game | Classic Retro Interactive Toy, Educational Learning System For Boys & Girls Ages 4+ | Basic Fun 09624

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The English synthpop band Depeche Mode's 1981 debut album, Speak & Spell, is named after the Speak & Spell. I promoted the choice of linear predictive coding to generate the speech signal from a small amount of data. Today, the speech could easily be recorded and stored in large digital memory chips. But in 1976, memory chips were not capable of storing that much data. We considered generating the speech from phonemes or sound fragments but the speech quality was not sufficient. A digital filter could be used and the time varying coefficients could be stored in memory but the amount of computations involved seemed too great. The word list used in each of the regional models reflects the recommendations of educators in each country. The English, French, German and Italian versions were all created by a team of non-specialists, in TI's plant near Antibes, France, under the watchful eye of Larry Brantingham who had patented the underlying technology.

Teddy Touch & Tell – The next generation of the Touch & Tell game, [85] Teddy Touch & Tell is shaped like a bear and educates children on the topics of the alphabet, numbers, colors, animals, and music. [105] a b c Abebe, Nitsuh (20 July 2006). "Depeche Mode: Speak & Spell / Music for the Masses / Violator". Pitchfork . Retrieved 14 December 2020. Woerner, Joerg. Texas Instruments Speak & Spell (English Voice Type 3). Datamath Calculator Museum. 3 December 2007. a b c d e "TI Talking Learning Aid Sets Pace for Innovative CES Introductions" (Press release). Texas Instruments. 11 June 1978 . Retrieved 17 December 2008.

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The Speak & Spell is often used in “ circuit bending,” for example, whereby the device’s normal functioning is disrupted and distorted to make new sounds by placing an alligator on a particular spot on the circuit board. From Casper Electronics (which offers detailed instructions on circuit bending): Drop It – A Super Speak & Spell game in which the player will see how new words are made by adding prefixes and suffixes. [27] Dalton, Stephen (May 2001). "Enjoy the Silence: 20 Years of Depeche Mode Albums". Uncut. No.48. London. p.66. ISSN 1368-0722. Woerner, Joerg. Texas Instruments Speak & Spell (English Voice Type 1). Datamath Calculator Museum. 14 July 2005.

In 1982, a compact version of the Speak & Math was developed contemporaneously with the Speak & Spell Compact. This version was only released in France as Les Maths Magique [94] (lit. The Magical Math). A redesigned version was developed in 1985 for British markets under the name of Maths marvel. [95] This was later released in Italian as Dotto Conta-Parla, [96] in French as le Calcul magique [97] (lit. Magical Calculator), and in German as Mathe-Fix. [98] Woerner, Joerg. Texas Instruments Speak & Math (Type 2). Datamath Calculator Museum. 25 December 2001. Woerner, Joerg. Texas Instruments Speak & Spell (Japan). Datamath Calculator Museum. 1 September 2005 The version of New Life on the first editions of the USA editions of the album are the "Remix", and not the standard "Album Version" that is found on the original UK Mute pressing. The version of Just Can't Get Enough on the first editions of the USA editions of album are the "Schizo Mix", and not the "Album Version" that is found on the original UK Mute pressing. The February 1983 issue of Computers & Electronics contained instructions for interfacing a Speak & Spell with a Sinclair ZX-80 a Sinclair ZX-81, or a Timex 1000. [48]Speak & Spell is the debut studio album by English electronic music band Depeche Mode. It was released on 5 October 1981, [3] or possibly 29 October 1981, [4] by Mute Records. It was the band's only album to feature Vince Clarke, and is much lighter in tone than their subsequent releases. UK "Collector's Edition" Remastered 180 gram LP, released March 12th, 2007. This is a commercial release. Woerner, Joerg. Texas Instruments Touch & Discover School Edition. Datamath Calculator Museum. 27 June 2005.

The Speak & Spell was not the first talking toy. But it was, as Texas Instruments boasted in its CES press release, the first with “no moving parts.” Other toys, such as Mattel’s Chatty Cathy, used pre-recorded voices on phonograph or tape, typically triggered by a pull-string or similar mechanism. These broke easily, as any parent would tell you. So “no moving parts” was a selling point for durability. Initially, there were only a very few people involved. At the initial meeting in November, Paul Breedlove came over to the research Labs with Gene Frantz and Larry Brantingham from the Consumer Products Group. The result of that meeting was that I was to propose a technique for generating the speech in the product. The challenge was that it had to be solid state (no pull strings!), cheap (meaning it used a low cost semiconductor technology), and the speech had to be good enough so that the user could understand the word out of context — a little bit harder than using a word in a sentence. Larry was a circuit designer and was tasked to determine if what I came up with could be implemented in an integrated circuit. Larry and I spent time together discussing various strategies, and Gene Frantz, who eventually became the project manager, kept the overall design moving forward. Guld- och Platinacertifikat − År 1987−1998" (PDF) (in Swedish). IFPI Sweden. 21 January 1991. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 May 2011. a b Gregory, Chris and Woerner, Joerg. Texas Instruments Speak & Spell (Type 2). Datamath Calculator Museum. 25 January 2002.As the program moved forward during 1977, additional people kept being added to the project. It was amazing to me how many people eventually become involved. [There were] people working on which spelling words to chose, what the product should look like, what it should be called, where it would be manufactured, and how it was to be marketed. The Speak & Math was very minutely redesigned in 1986, under the same name, with the new version representing nothing more substantial than a redesign of the faceplate graphics. [99] In 1990 the Super Speak & Math was released as a major redesign similar to the first version of the Super Speak & Spell. [100] As with the Super Speak & Spell, the display screen of the Super Speak & Math was changed to an LCD screen instead of the former VFD screen. The keyboard was also expanded and given more functions. The general structure of the console was also altered similarly to the Super Speak & Spell such that the handle which had come at the top of the screen in prior Speak & Math units was now found on the bottom of the toy and ergonomic features were added to the shape.

It functioned as a handheld drill-and-practice aid for basic math, and was designed to resemble a wise and friendly owl. The Little Professor suggested problems to students and rewarded them with a message on its display when they gave the correct answer. The Speak & Math (sold as "Speak & Maths" in some countries) was released in 1980 with a shape identical to both the Speak & Spell and the Speak & Read but with a completely different keyboard layout, different game [91] [92] features, and a different color scheme. Where the American Speak & Spell had been colored red with yellow and orange accents, the American Speak & Math was gray with blue and orange highlights. The Speak & Math was designed to focus on mathematics in children of ages 6–12 with a library of over 100,000 random and preprogrammed problems. [91] It was regarded as the spiritual successor to TI's earlier DataMan series, [93] with the difference mainly relating to the addition of speech synthesizing software and the visual display. The Speak & Math was only released to American and British markets.

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Offiziellecharts.de – Depeche Mode – Speak & Spell" (in German). GfK Entertainment Charts. Retrieved 6 January 2019.

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