My old uncle - a retired electrical engineer - has gone back to night classes to learn electronics. His class has to do little projects that they pick themselves; nothing too advanced yet - his last one was a musical door-chime... Anyway, he was asking me for ideas for projects to build, and believe me I've got dozens :-) The one that I think is of most value to most people, if he designs a simple circuit for it that I can publish, is a cheap sound sampling interface .... which we can happen to steal for our various cryptophone projects... Here's how I see the design: it feeds data into a (probably IBM PC) parallel port (has to be the bidirectional kind, a plain printer port clearly won't work), and *it* supplies the timing, ie the PC reads from the port when the flags say data is ready, and no more data will be presented to that port until n uSecs later - I foresee it supplying data at either 8000 bytes/sec or 4000 bytes/sec if the former is too fast for a PC to handle. Putting the timing in the sampler frees the PC from a horrendous overhead in sampling at accurate times, and would make it trivial to feed the 4000Hz samples into code like 'shorten' which would then be shoved down a v32bis modem quite comfortably. At a cost *much* less than any commercial sampler: this thing is built from: a battery; a box; a DAC; a 7$ microphone; a parallel port driver; a crystal, and a counter. And that's it. Dead cheap and easy to build, I hope. What I'm writing here to ask is where can I get info on what chip to use to feed data into a PC down the bidirectional parallel port, and how do you drive the chip and what are the pinouts etc. I don't expect anyone to mail me detailed schematics or anything like that, just a pointer to where to look for them. (Though if someone *did* have data sheets, I wouldn't say no to a quick fax :-) ) (fwiw, I used to do electronics as a hobby *years* ago - I once built a dual-processor micro with dynamic ram, so don't be shy of mailing me anything grossly technical; I've forgotten most of what I knew in detail, but I remember enough to steer my uncle in the right direction, though I won't be doing the actual circuit design myself) Thanks for your time. I hope this isn't considered too off-topic... (I mean, I *could* have posted an incredibly interesting piece about the Challenger disater instead, eh Eric? ;-)) G PS Pointers to suitable usenet groups equally appreciated...