BACKGROUND
Lineage of Sports Sounds Pro:
When the author's son started playing high school baseball. The author started
searching for a means to add excitement through sound effects to the games. When he
attended a local baseball game at a rival school, the announcer there was doing timely
sound effects. The author asked him how he was able to produce these sounds
and was informed that the announcer was using a
laptop computer and a program call "PCDJ".
This program was written by a college student
(now a graduate) named Daniel Lewis.
The program was shareware and reasonably priced.
The author purchased a copy of the program and has used it successfully for a couple
of years.
The sound effects produced caught the attention of others and several high school
announcers inquired about the product. Unfortunately "PCDJ" was sold by Mr. Lewis to another
company. They were only after the name and they placed the "PCDJ" name on their
own product. Their product is excellent but it is
oriented towards professional Disc Jockey use with elaborate mixing capabilities.
It is no longer a quick and simple sound machine for sports competition.
The author searched for another source and found a couple of commercial programs used by
various professional major league teams and professional organizations. Both products,
while excellent, were also quite expensive (around $10,000 or more) but they offered
existing sound libraries, enhanced sound cards, and were able to handle video output
for jumbo-trons (the large video display screens you see at major league ballparks
and stadiums).
Some of the commercial products also had stripped down versions for school usage but
even then they were still quite pricey. The author, who is a professional programmer,
decided to write his own version of the software and make it available
to High School organizations, Little Leagues, Babe Ruth Leagues, etc. The
program is written in a language called Delphi.
The original version of "PCDJ"
served as the template for Sports Sounds. The main display screen of Sports Sounds
is very similar to the display screen in "PCDJ". The author was able to use his own
experience in doing sound effects at baseball games at the Babe Ruth, High School,
and College level to incorporate several new features that he found helpful. Among
them are play lists, multiple groups of pages, right mouse click popup menus for
adding and editing, and drag and drop capability for button organization.
For the first year of its life, Sports Sounds was Freeware. As the user community grew
and the requests for additional functionality were received along with the increased need
for user support, the next generation of Sports Sounds emerged with a very
affordable price.
In 2003, Sports Sounds changed its name to Sports Sound Pro. The author was
never able to acquire the domain name SportsSounds.com but was able to acquire the domain
name SportsSoundsPro.com. Also a major upgrade to the program was released.
There are commercial products, both hardware and software, that functionally do what Sports
Sounds Pro does and they range in cost from around $3,000 to $10,000.