Ladislav,

   I agree. Miles is probably the most common sound interface ever used in DOS 
and no other so far could be called a "standard". There is also HMI who is 
pretty common as well, but I know very little about.
   Mr. Miles has been very attentive in answering my e-mails. He explained me 
that the MSS no longer belongs to him and that most of the information, he is 
unable to disclose, but that if he may be able to help, he'll get me what he 
can. He also answered many of my questions.
   Of course, MSS is totally commercial, but I want to point out how important 
it is to put attention to how it works. My approach, so far, as regards the 
Miles Sound System, is only to build a patch... a half-driver that can be 
placed where applications expect to find the MSS, and which will redirect the 
output to the actual sound driver. In the spec I'm developing, I've called the 
main driver "dimi-driver" and the patch "teri-driver". I also refer to 
theoretical emulation drivers as "semi-drivers", that would also redirect the 
output to the dimi-driver, although I am not thinking of developing one. These 
names are arbitrary and chosen only for the sound of the words (except "Dimi", 
which is my cat's name, he, he).
   Although the teri-driver development is something I'm desperate to work 
upon, I am conscious on how important it is to leave such task for the moment 
that at least one dimi-driver is ready. I'm currently working on the main CPOS 
interface, where the NSS module (a dimi-driver) and the Code-1 module (Unicode 
support) are going to be hooked. I have been modifying some things I've 
realised that are not good as I originally planned them.

                Lucas


--- On Mon, 2/11/09, Ladislav Lacina <la...@seznam.cz> wrote:

> From: Ladislav Lacina <la...@seznam.cz>
> Subject: Re: [Freedos-devel] Pre-presentation of a project
> To: freedos-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
> Received: Monday, 2 November, 2009, 10:31 PM
> I want to react to part about the
> sound system..
> I also strongly advocate Miles sound system in various
> discussions about DOS sound interface. It is modular, many
> programs and games support it and new drivers for new PCI
> and integrated cards can be written for it.
> The DigPak/MidPak  more or less only different name
> for DOS part of Miles sound system.
> 
> 
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