A switcher that will connect 2-3-4 other devices such as a camera, vcr etc. one at a time to a single audio/video input on the TV set.
From the question it sounds like you would like to hook multiple components to one surround system. For that you would need an A/V selector ($20 - $40).---- Setting up a surround system using an A/V selector with multiple components (RCA)1.) Connect all components to the selectors inputs. This requires RCA (Yellow/Red/White) cables from each of the devices. Connecting the video and audio into the ports that you would like (i.e. 1,2,3,4).2.) Find the output from the selector. Take the Video (Yellow) and connect it from the output on the selector to the input on the television/monitor. Then attach the audio (Red/White) from the selector into the surround system.3.) To use a device, turn it on and then select it's appropriate number on the selector and it will switch the audio/video to the TV and sound system.This same setup will work for any type of audio/video hookups granted the selector must be changed to support the types (i.e. Component, S-Video, VGA, HDMI)
Video is picture and audio is the sound. Home theater receivers have RCA composite or component, S-Video or HDMI for the video input, and RCA analog, Toslink (optical) or coaxial inputs for digital audio.
Red and white are audio, yellow is video. This applies to standard A/V only.
The yellow cable is the video. It plugs into the yellow video input jack. The white and red, or black and red cables are left and right audio. The connect to the audio in or out jacks.
S-video is a two part video signal carrying luma and chroma signals (Brightness and color signals). There is no audio signal in an S-video connection so the audio will need a separate connection to operate.
From the question it sounds like you would like to hook multiple components to one surround system. For that you would need an A/V selector ($20 - $40).---- Setting up a surround system using an A/V selector with multiple components (RCA)1.) Connect all components to the selectors inputs. This requires RCA (Yellow/Red/White) cables from each of the devices. Connecting the video and audio into the ports that you would like (i.e. 1,2,3,4).2.) Find the output from the selector. Take the Video (Yellow) and connect it from the output on the selector to the input on the television/monitor. Then attach the audio (Red/White) from the selector into the surround system.3.) To use a device, turn it on and then select it's appropriate number on the selector and it will switch the audio/video to the TV and sound system.This same setup will work for any type of audio/video hookups granted the selector must be changed to support the types (i.e. Component, S-Video, VGA, HDMI)
No, you cannot convert HDMI (digital) into component video (analog), or extract the audio in analog form. Both devices must be HDMI to permit a connection.
MP3- audio MP4- audio and video MP5- audio, video
If you have recorded video/audio with a single camera source you will not be able to separate out the crowd noise from the performance as they are both mixed on the same audio track.
In AVS Video Editor, you can extract the audio.
To change the audio in the Audio/Music track, simply delete it and put something else in its place. To change the audio of a video in the video track, first Mute the audio of the video. Then place alternate audio in the Audio/Music track.
There is only one audio track to work with in Windows Movie Maker. The only other audio track is connected to the Video Track (the video's audio).Therefore, you can only have one video (with audio) in the Video Track and one audio/music insertion in the Music/Audio Track.
Video is Audio's partner.
Sony Vegas Pro 8 has all the features necessary to add audio to video. Some useful tools it feaures are dedicated audio editing software and software that enables both video and audio editing at the same time. If that still isn't enough you can import audio from another program or location and splice it into your project.
Power Video to Audio Converter
No thats just for converting Audio not Video
You can't run the video's audio while video is paused. But, if you want to hear the video's audio without the distraction of the video, click the + button beside the Video track in the time-line view. Then, click, hold and drag the Audio track down into the Audio/Music track below.Close up the Video track. Then delete the video (or Remove it). The only thing remaining should be the original video's audio in the Audio/Music track. If you want the video back in the project, drag it back down into the Video track.