Run the audio through a receiver and speakers. Most receivers will let you hook up headphones and the speakers can either be on or off.
The locking connector makes an ultra-reliable connection and the cable can not be accidentally pulled out of the headphones. The cable will stay connected to the headphones until you intentionally remove it. The non-locking connector is very reliable, and has a snug fit into the headphone jack, but, if you were to trip or pull on the cable hard enough, it will detach from the headphones without damaging either the cable or the headphones. Either way, you will be able to use your headphones with the modified cable, or any other standard cable with a 3.5mm (1/8") plug on the end. The cable modification carries a 2 year warranty from The Sound Professionals.
Dynamic headphones refers to most headphones made and used today. They are usually more affordable than electrostatic headphones and generate sound by converting a signal into vibrations as it passes through the headphones. Dynamic headphones can be used with or without an amp and do not produce as high quality sound as electrostatic headphones, but several high end models produce professional quality sound.
Probably! Try it out!
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.
No. Not properly, anyway. The connectors are different on Skull Candy headphones and don't match up properly on the Samsung Galaxy. The result is music playing through your phone's speaker as though no headphones were inserted, distorted sound, or sound cutting out and stopping when the jack is moved.
The computer is programmed to respond when sound cables are attached Edit: The sound cable is being attached to the laptop, but the desktop, which is in sleep mode, wakes up. The cable is not being attached to the desktop.
Inside your computer is something called a sound card; this is what you plug your headphones into. What the sound card does is it reads data on your computer and determines what sound needs to be played and when, then it takes a copy of the data that it has determined is sound and instantly converts it into a signal which is sent to your headphones, then your headphones convert it into sound. Simple
Yep! As long as you have a cable, it can connect to most amplifiers, like piano or guitar amps, and I believe it is even possible to connect an electronic drum set to a computer, registering the midi audio.
you can't. you have to go headphone jack to an outside audio source
Any in ear headphones are the most portable and give great sound.
No, only people can talk. Headphones merely reproduce sound.
yes