An 8-bit, home computer, "Commodore 64", had a built-in cassette player, and was introduced in January 1982.
Let the dealership deal with the battery after you buy a better car with a CD player instead of a tape deck,
No, computer towers do not have slots for cassettes. Older models used to have slots for floppy discs, and current models usually have slots for compact discs, but they were never designed to use cassettes. And even the very early computers that did use magnetic tape, used reel to reel tape, not cassette tape.
The standard factory radio was an 1 1/2 DIN AM/FM/Cassette. If you wanted a cd player, an aux cd player was installed in the slot under the AC/heating controls.
You cannot cheaply 'convert' a car cassette stereo to accept a usb pen drive. You can get a cassette - to - ipod adapter that allows you to plug a MP3 player through a cable into an adapter that loads into the cassette slot. Pick up a cheap MP3 player and copy the MP3 files from the pen drive into the player. A new stereo with USB input can be purchased for under $50.00
for the front, just slide it in the slot, for the changer, press the eject buttong and the CD holder ("cassette") will come out. Put the cds in the cassette and put the cassette back in the changer
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.
normally the PCIE slot
you put the CD in the CD slot.
What type of memory slots are found in laptop computers
Most computers these days - have a modem 'card' plugged into a vacant slot on the motherboard. This is the same whether it's a desktop machine or a tower unit.
well its a slot where the ram card would go in your computer. ram is the computers "short term memory"
Yes they are because I once put a fake 10p in a slot machine and it picked up I did and closed the whole machine down!