It is surely true that in theory anything with a digital display
could be made to talk.

And it is pretty easy when done at design phase rather than a
retrofit.

Retrofitting  used to be a bit easier when stuff had more individual
(discrete) parts and they wer larger.  Now-a-days everything is
done with microcontrollers and/or customized chips and the
connections between the chip and display are likely hidden on
very densely packed circuit boards.  Of course no manufacturer
will ever let anybody at the control programs for the
microcontrollers to modify them appropriately because they're
precious trade secrets! <HA>

If we had a small army of very talented technicians who could
reverse engineer devices and do the high skill soldering rework
necessary it would be great.

such high quality techs are rare and hard to find. and the work
is very difficult.


Several years ago, a french company manufactured a so-called universal
talk box.  They had designs for adapting it to a number of VCRs
and such.  Trouble was they couldn't find or keep people who
wanted to do the rework let alone pay them what they were worth.

tom


Net-Tamer V 1.13 Beta - Registered

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