![]() Supposedly Synergy acted as the ODM-producer for it (as evidenced by their logo on the rear side of the card, although early and now very rare GUS PnP cards did not have the Synergy logo). Released in 1995, the Ultrasound Plug & Play was a new card based on AMD InterWave technology with a completely different sound set. Gravis UltraSound PnP Pro UltraSound Plug & Play (PnP) They were only a little more expensive than Creative cards, undercutting many equivalent professional cards aimed at musicians by a huge margin. The cards were all manufactured on red PCBs, similar to fellow Canadian company ATI. With up to 32 hardware audio channels, the GUS was notable for MIDI playback quality with a large set of instrument patches that could be stored in its own RAM. ![]() Samples of pianos or trumpets, for example, sound more like their real respective instruments. The Gravis UltraSound was notable at the time of its 1992 launch for providing the IBM PC platform with sample-based music synthesis technology (marketed as " wavetable"), that is the ability to use real-world sound recordings rather than artificial computer-generated waveforms as the basis of a musical instrument. It was very popular in the demoscene during the 1990s. The Gravis UltraSound or GUS is a sound card for the IBM PC compatible system platform, made by Canada-based Advanced Gravis Computer Technology Ltd.
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