No. Most CD-ROM drives, back when they were introduced, were completely autonomous. Using buttons on the front of the drive, and either the headphone jack or a wire to the sound card, you could play an audio CD without any CPU or RAM being used at all.
Obviously the playback of an audio CD uses far more system resources than moving the mouse
the CD rotates at a very high speed
and the reader head continuously keeps detecting the bits written on the CD
moving the mouse just uses some system resources
MP3- audio MP4- audio and video MP5- audio, video
what is Audio-Visual round
No, it can output any type of audio.
Being able to listen to a script instead of reading it. Audio appendixes can be downloaded.
That is exactly right. There is a jack that looks like head phones on one side and the other side splits into left and right audio plugs. On the back of your tv there should be audio plugs that are associated to the hdmi plug. Plug in your audio here. Alternately you can plug your audio dirrectly into your stereo. Or go from your stereo, into your tv or vice versa.
yes it does!
yes it does!
No. Most CD-ROM drives, back when they were introduced, were completely autonomous. Using buttons on the front of the drive, and either the headphone jack or a wire to the sound card, you could play an audio CD without any CPU or RAM being used at all.
YOU CaN'T!
There are many different media playback programs available for Linux. Some of the more popular include: * VLC * Amarok (audio only) * Totem * Kaffeine * Dragon Video Player * XMMS (audio only) * Juk (audio only)
So you will buy more audio and video playback devices and software. The Dirty Dollar.
It's probably a comma (,) or an elipses (...)
massive proon
Check Audio Setup under Options. Page 17 in the user manual has the details on how to set up your audio interface.
A sound card will only effect the audio component of media playback. It will not improve the quality of visual playback.
MP3 = MPEG-1 Audio Layer-3 MPEG = Moving Picture Experts Group, which develops standards for digital video and digital audio compression
WMA or Windows Media Audio is the audio compression technology developed by Microsoft Corporation. WMA name is given to audio codecs and audio files which use WMA technologies for compression. WMA songs can be stored on CDs and DVDs for playback on PCs and CD/DVD players which support this format. Many of the portable audio players support WMA format playback in addition to MP3 and Real Audio file formats.