Yes. What you need is a simple 1/8 inch stereo headphone splitter. They are available as a small plastic fob, or in a "Y" cable configuration. A perfectly good example of either can be bought at someplace like Radio Shack for under $5.
Plug the chord of an SPECIFICALLY XBOX BRAND headset into the bottom controller.
To listen to the iPod while it is not connected to the computer (assuming you already have songs on it), simply unplug the iPod, connect the headphones to it, play the music and start listening.
you can use another radio
Headsets or headphones enable you to listen to audio without the people around you hearing as well. It can also help you drown out background noise so you can just focus on the audio without distractions.
Google "Sena SM10" & there are several sources of info' on the first page of links, some of which include a review also. I just bought one of these & I don't have it yet, but from everything I found out from extensive research, this is a very solid, well-made, excellent device via which you can connect an audio device (e.g., Mp3 or phone) to two (2) bluetooth headsets enabling two people to listen to the same audio at the same time.
Yes, you can find a product that does both. The only difference in appearance is that the headphones will have a microphone that hangs on the cord. This will let you listen to music, and then switch to listening and talking during phone calls.
Many runners or people who exercise and listen to music actually prefer wireless headsets. They are very affordable and easy to use. http://www.hellodirect.com/hellodirect/Shop?PCR=1:1:5:15
yes you can, but first you need to purchase an ipod car adapter
An application which is running on a local machine may listen on network ports for connections from remote machines. The machine may have firewall software, and the network may have firewall hardware, intended to prevent remote machines from being able to connect, so the answer is yes and no. Assuming you can run the program on the local machine and it is able to listen on an appropriate port, and the remote computer knows how to connect to the local machine, and is permitted to access by any security software and hardware, then yes.
Yes you can, you can listen to any iPod whole its charging in the car and if its hooked up to an AUX jack you still can.
Place the cassette adapter into the 1999 cassette slot with the arrows on the top side. Plug the wire into the device that you want to listen to. The sound will go through the adapter and play through the radios speakers.
i dont think so, since those are gaming headsets and dont have 3.5 mm headphones jack