Miro Computer Products AG
miro Computer Products AG was a German manufacturer of PC multimedia equipment. Their product line included sound cards, TV and radio adapters, and some graphics cards.
The company was acquired by Pinnacle Systems in 1997.
miro Computer Products Inc., the US arm of the business resided at
955 Commercial Street,
Palo Alto, CA 94303, USA.
Tel: (800) 249-MIRO,
Tel: (415) 855-0940,
Fax: (415) 855-9004,
Fax on demand: (415) 855-9494,
Hotline: (415) 855-0950,
Internet: support@miro.mirusa.com,
Web Site: www.miro.com
Sound Cards
miroSOUND PCM 1 ProIntroduced: 1994 Featuring the then-new OPL4 chip from Yamaha, the PCM 1 Pro provided good General MIDI sound quality through this onboard wavetable (although it only works in Windows, not DOS), in addition to full backward compatibility with older sound card standards Ad Lib, Sound Blaster Pro 2 version 3.01, and Windows Sound System. The card's 16-bit sampling capability complies with MPC1 and MPC2 multimedia specifications. The Yamaha YRW801 chip in the bottom left is a 2 MB ROM which holds approximately 330 samples, mostly 22.05-kHz 12-bit samples with some drums at 44.1 kHz. It is compatible with the General MIDI standard (128 melody sounds, 47 percussion sounds). As mentioned, the OPL4 chip here does *not* work in DOS, as it doesn't use the MPU-401 address/IRQ. Only the game/MIDI port is MPU-401-compatible. More Images |
miroSOUND FM 10Introduced: 1995 |
miroSOUND PCM 10Introduced: 1995 The Yamaha YRW801 chip in the bottom left is a 2MB ROM which holds approximately 330 samples, mostly 22.05-kHz 12-bit samples with some drums at 44.1 kHz. It is compatible with the General MIDI standard (128 melody sounds, 47 percussion sounds). Windows 95/98, Windows NT 4.0, User Manual More Images |
miroSOUND PCM 12Introduced: 1995 Built-in wavetable synthesizer based on Yamaha OPL4 chip and 2MB ROM sound set. The Yamaha YRW801 chip in the bottom left is a 2MB ROM which holds approximately 330 samples, mostly 22.05-kHz 12-bit samples with some drums at 44.1 kHz. It is compatible with the General MIDI standard (128 melody sounds, 47 percussion sounds). |
MiroSOUND PCM 20Introduced: 1996 PnP. The OPTi chipset manages direct MIDI playback over the MPU-401 interface. Yamaha’s own SW20-PC provided a software driver for DOS enabling MPU-401 playback. |
Graphics Cards
HiScore 3DLaunched: 1996 The miro HiScore 3D came with the larger complement of 6 MB of video memory for 3Dfx Voodoo cards. This was split into 2 MB for a frame buffer and 4 MB for textures. Over the 4 MB Voodoo cards, this allowed smoother 3D graphics rendering as less requests from memory were required in-game. Being a dedicated 3D accelerator card with no 2D capability, it connected via a VGA passthrough cable to a 2D card in your computer, where another VGA cable would be connected to your monitor. The card auto-detected when 3D was being requested and commands would be sent to the HiScore 3D instead of being processed by the 2D card. It was followed in 1998 with the HiScore 3D 2, which was a 3Dfx Voodoo 2 card with 12 MB of video memory. The latest Windows 95/98 driver is v2.7, dated February 1999 - download here If you have any issues with the miro driver, try using the 3Dfx Voodoo reference driver instead. |