You need a RF modulator to convert the signal to a (RF) TV channel. The audio and video quality will be lower doing this.
Assuming you want to hook up your computer to your television, and your tv has composite or s-video inputs and you computer only has a VGA output, your only real option is to get an adapter that will convert VGA to composite or S-video.
S-video is better than the composite video when output to a television
S-Video, Composite-S and Coaxial
Composite video out has better performance than S-Video.
VGA is a standard for video only. You can purchase a scan converter to convert NTSC or PAL composite video to VGA from a computer supply store.
Not sure if they do anything. VGA is a video output on computer not audio, so will convert to the Yellow composite or S/Video cable. Red and white composite cables are for audio and with no audio coming from the VGA I cant see why they are included. Does anyone know or are they just a waste of space.
There are many ways in which one can use a S video to composite cable. The simplest way is by using an adapter if your signal source allows video input.
An S-Video Port
An S video cord is used in video systems that separate the luminance and chrominance portions of a video signal and carry them through separate cables within the S video cable. Composite video has both of these items contained within the same signal. By keeping the circuits separated, the color and picture quality is improved as compared to a composite video signal.
You will either need a composite(not component) cable or a HDMI cable. I think you can use S-Video but S-Video doesn't compare to HDMI or composite.
S-video, rca and composite are all methods of transfering video from device to device. RCA uses two contacts, s-video uses 4 or 7 composite uses 6 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S-Video The S-cable will produce a slightly better picture if the TV is good enough.
Yes, the Wii U can be used with both composite and S-video cables. The system is compatible with both the Wii composite cable and the standard video cable that shipped with the original Wii in 2006.