a mess up in the headphone? you may need a new tv or new headphones
The headphone jack in the TV are switched so that the TV's speakers are turned off when you plug in the phones. This jack has been broken on your TV, so you need to get that part fixed (if it is a more recent TV) or replace the TV (if it is older). Note that the part itself is cheap, but getting at the jack can take several hours, which may make the repair more expensive than purchasing a new set. You can plug the audio output of the PS3 into a stereo system that has a headphone jack if you wish to listen to it.
The problem is in the headphone jack. It has a switch that shuts off the speakers when you plug in headphones, but that switch is stuck on. You will have to have the jack replaced if it is built in to the motherboard or on a connector on the front of the tower, or you can replace the sound card.
Find the audio-out port on the back of your PC or side of your laptop (usually a green marker with a picture of headphones or sound waves), and plug in headphones or speakers. If you only have the white and red stereo cables, head over to a wal-mart and buy a "Y-Splitter" so that it will fit into the computer and plug your stereo cables into the splitter.
The Gemstone speakers are part of a system that does surround emulation, not true surround sound. There are no rear speakers in these systems, just front speakers with a processor that uses digital processing to fool the ear in believing the sound comes from the side or behind. This only works well with certain source material at certain frequencies. The articulated array speakers feature a moveable driver in order to direct the sound towards the listener, as used in the front speakers, or utilize the technology that Bose developed years ago called Direct Reflecting, where some of the sound comes from a driver, and some of the sound is bounced off of a wall and is indirectly broadcast to the audience. This technology works very well for surround speakers, as it creates a greater sense of envelopment.
Centre speakers are commonly used as part of a surround sound speaker system. Generally, centre speakers produce quality sound which make the room sound like a cinema.
cxan you use 5 way speakers for surround sound
Nope - if your sound is coming from both the headphones and the built-in speakers, it's your headphone socket in the laptop - not the plug that's at fault ! Basically an audio socket is a switch. While no external speakers (ie headphones) are connected, its internal components direct the sound to the computer's built-in speakers. Inserting a plug into the socket breaks the connection to the internal speaker circuitry, and directs the sound to the headphones.
Speakers and Headphones send out audio from a computer! Speakers and Headphones send out audio from a computer!
it connects to the speakers.....
When you plug the headphones in, that disconnects the speakers, and no sound will come from them. Unplug the headphones to hear the speakers.
That depends on whether or not your computer has speakers. If it does, then unplug your headphones, plug in the speakers, and make sure your volume is turned up. If you don't have speakers, then there is no way to do have sound without headphones other than to buy speakers. Most desktops have speakers built in to them, though.
Usually if this happens, yes unfortunately you need a new sound card. Sometimes it is only a piece of audio software that is set to change the sound.
download a new sound driver for the particular laptop model, but for xp
sound travels from the computer to the speakers where sound waves pick up and the sound gets played
Your speakers are broken.
The purpose is to either listen to audio on a computer without built in speakers or to boost sound
Many amplifiers automatically disconnect the speakers when a headphone plug is inserted, unplug the headphones and the speakers should come back on.
as the sound comes out of the speakers its an output