Dan O'Neill wrote:

>
>> There were a lot of tel-a-talkers around too, but only banks and loan 
>> sharks could afford them ;-)
>>
>> -larry
>
>
> Any idea who the manufacturer was?
>
> dan
>
>
>
from model tat-100 "nel-tech labs, inc"   10 londonderry commons 
londonderry nh, 03053
i think the al-500 was one of theirs too.

both used ram chip storage,
the tat could be loaded by handset, external cassette player, or 
external line control box.
the al had a cassette player that would load the memory on power up... 
was an "announce" only box.

i just googled and they are still around-

http://www.nel-techlabs.com/

most of our customers are using boxes from service bureaus that either 
send a cassette or cd a week/ or month (lowcost), or use a proprietary 
dial up scheme double speed to a cassette that then loaded the memory 
(higher cost).  voice talent and music fees are not cheap.  Distribs 
usually have some glossys for moh bureaus.  You might look at a pc with 
a sound card (1v line out)  you could push a wav or mp3 to it by dialup 
or thru a 'net connection, proly a lot less that the programmable moh 
boxes.  Or the cust could record their own with the pc, car dealers seem 
to like that. 

-larry



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