Auxiliary inputs to a receiver are always stereo. If you have a 5-channel analog signal (from a computer or other multi-channel device), you will need a receiver with a 5.1 analog input. This has 5 separate RCA inputs for left, right, center, sub, and the two surround speakers.
An analog output from a VHS-Hi Fi VCR or the analog outputs of a DVD player can be input into the stereo aux inputs of a receiver and decoded to Dolby Surround, but this format is actually only 3 discrete channels, left, right, and surround. It has no separate information for the sub or the center channel, and has a limited bandwidth on the surround channel.
So, the answer is NO.
Read more: Is_there_a_way_you_can_add_5.1_audio_to_Auxiliary_Inputs
No, it has audio inputs, not output. You would connect the speakers to whatever your source is (your computer, game console, DVD player...)
http://myrightbrain.wordpress.com/2006/06/11/how-to-convert-mp4-audio-files-to-mp3-using-itunes/ There, follow the instructions and convert it. Or you could look at some programs.
It's an input that receives audio. On a TV this would be your red and white RCA cables. On a mixing console for recording music it could be an XLR or 1/4" cable. For MP3 Players it can be a 1/8" cable. That's the basics of it. There is a lot more options for audio cables and inputs, those are just the main ones.
There are many places where one could purchase two HD receivers. Some of the best places to purchase HD receivers would be electronic retailers like Amazon or Best Buy.
on demand programming is available with satellite receivers,if you sign up for the package.
USE VIRRTUAL DJ (5).......YOU RECORD THE AUDIO PART YOU WANT....(THE FINAL FILE WILL BE IN WMV,YOU WILL CONVECT INTO ANY AUDIO FILE FORMAT YOU WANT......Well, I still use SnowFox Audio Converter. It's a good software, which could extract audio from almost all video files, convert a batch of audios, trim audio and many other useful features.
It's not difficult to convert WMA format into MP3 format. The reason for this is because there are a vast variety of different websites, and a vast variety of free software that will convert WMA - or any audio format - into MP3 format with minimum trouble. If people preferred to go with paid software or paid websites, they could pay to convert their WMA audio files into Mp3 instead.
You need an output pin as well, so in the example of the 16 pin chip, you could have 13 inputs.
According to their website, Pioneer Electronics sells almost every audio component you could possibly need for the automobile. AppRadio systems (to connect smartphones to your car's audio system), GPS Navigation systems, DVD and CD Receivers, speakers and systems including subwoofers, amplifiers, and more!
It's an input that receives audio. On a TV this would be your red and white RCA cables. On a mixing console for recording music it could be an XLR or 1/4" cable. For MP3 Players it can be a 1/8" cable. That's the basics of it. There is a lot more options for audio cables and inputs, those are just the main ones.
They could be just for looks, which is probably the case.
You could either use a 'front end' programme like ALL2LAME or Multi frontend. For frontend programmes to work, normally will need both the lossless codec (e.g. Flac.exe for flac lossless) and LAME.exe ('L'ames 'A' 'M'p3 'E'ncoder) Also could use foobar2000, and will only need LAME.exe, or Audio Transcoder, it read 20 and convert to 14 audio formats, it's handy and cheap :-)