no its impossible
To record guitar on your computer, you will need an audio interface, a microphone or direct input box for your guitar, recording software, and headphones or speakers to monitor your recordings.
here is the signal flow from voice to speaker: The audio signal goes into the microphone then via radio frequencies which are received at the wireless transmitter box. This can then be plugged into a channel on a mixing desk and treated as a normal microphone input. The audio then goes out of the desk and to the amplifiers and speakers.
Speakers and Headphones are output devices. A microphone, sometimes integrated with speakers, is an input device.
Audio: Line-in; Microphone
If the microphone has a USB plug, then plug it into the USB port on the computer. If the microphone has an audio plug, then plug it into the audio input port on the computer. If the microphone came with any software disks, then install those after plugging the microphone into the correct port on the computer.
If it is an audio-output jack, then yes. If it is input, it can be used for a microphone. You can test this by trying headphones or speakers on the jack, this won't damage anything on your...computer?
Audio input, microphone
that is called the moniter with speakers
A headset can function as both an input and an output device. It serves as an output device by producing sound for the user to hear, such as audio from a computer or phone. It can also function as an input device by incorporating a microphone to capture the user's voice for communication or recording purposes.
In most cases you need 4 parts: 1- Input(microphone, iPod, CD player, radio, etc) 2- Mixer 3-amplifier 4- speakers
Sound port is a jack that usually has a sound output and input connectors which are used to connect headphones, speakers and microphone to a computer. Laptop and computer have different combinations of audio port.
To connect an XLR microphone to your audio interface, you will need an XLR cable. Plug one end of the XLR cable into the microphone and the other end into the XLR input on your audio interface. Make sure to turn on phantom power if your microphone requires it. Adjust the input levels on your audio interface and computer settings to ensure proper recording levels.