Hook them to your VIDEO ports. They are a series of red white and yellow female ports. Your will be using the YELLOW for VIDEO. (Some older TVs do not have this.) Usually via an RCA type connector. Some TVs have multiple VIDEO ports and you use buttons on your remote to cycle through the video ports (or a TV/VIDEO button is used) You can also do this through your VCR video ports to record and show video on your TV.
Composite Video (RCA jack plug, or F-pin) S-Video (Super-Video) Component Video. DVI (Digital Visual Interface) HDMI (High Definition Multimedia Interface)
Jack
Yes,it has the option for use as a computer monitor and has Video Interface, Component, composite, HDMI, S-Video. HDMI Ports , 3 ports
A HD TV has HD video ports and an RCA or Coaxial cable video ports on it. The HD video ports are colored red, green, and blue, and since you have a standard definition satillite receiver, you won't be using them. RCA ports have red, white, and yellow tips, with the yellow cord transfering video and the red and white cords carrying sound. These should be located near the red, green, and blue video ports for the HD connection. A Coaxial cable connection has a chrome screw-like ext
For cars with a video screen for DVDs etc there may be an input jack to add an alternative video signal to the screen. Likely this will be RCA ports (yellow and two audio ports coloured white=left and red=right).
I don't know about fivewire ports but if you mean FireWire: FireWire ports are used by many video cameras and are commonly seen on Macintosh computers, however they are also seen on PCs.
Look for an oblong shaped brick/card with fans on it that has many video ports on it.
Blu-Ray players with internet streaming will play video back through the other ports, although new model players with HDMI outputs will not be able to send high definition video through the component video ports.
It depends on which ports you have. If you have PC then you can connect your video card in ISA (really old port),PCI or PCI-E ports. If you you have a laptop, you can use PCMCI port to connect a video card. You video card should have according specifications for PCI-E it should be PCI-E compatible.
Most newer laptops have firewire ports and VGA out, (15 pin as opposed to 9 pin serial connections) and some include RCA (composite output) or S-video out connections.
No, you can't. Laptops have its own ports. If you want to upgrade your laptop video card, you need to make sure that your laptop has proper ports (mini PCI-E). And then get a video card which will fit that port.