best and only way varieson the type of wall you have in your house, if you have solid brick/block walls then the only real way is to chase the walls out with a proper chaser set to cut thinly or run an angle grinder with a wide cut diamond tip blade along your walls, once this is done then set your wires and fill the chases , obviously this is messy and best done if your planning on decorating straight after. alternativly if you own a house where internal walls are stud work( plaster board) then cut out a standard square where you intend your wires to enter this can then be covered with a joining plate available from most top end a/v suppliers( this allows you to connect your wires to the back of it and be left with just connectors showing to connect your a/v equipment too) you can then use a rod( a long flexible piece of metal with a hook on the end to draw your cables through the wall the the exit point( anither square cut to single plug socket size) again covering this with a plate from the a/v store. i have done both installations over the last couple of years and must say that the plates are much neater and can be bought in all forms, i have behing my tv 5 plates with hdmi sockets, scart sockets and all my speaker wires terminating in connectors.
Yes but you will need HDMI cables.
They are capable of running 5.1 surround sound in one convienient pin. Toslink cables are capable of 7.1 and also run on one pin.
If you want the surround sound to play through them then yes. If you want some other audio to be played than no.
Wireless surround sounds plays through a medium of adapter such as bluetooth to produce high efficient output resulting in high surround sound effect.
Connect the audio out of the TV to the audio input of the surround receiver with a dual RCA cable. Note that this connection isn't surround. You will need to connect a DVD, Blu-Ray or digital cable box to the surround receiver for true surround sound.
This is TRUE but better quality sound comes from Optical or digital hookups.
Surround Sound was invented in 1843
You'll need a receiver with at least 2 HDMI inputs and 1 output, as well as an HD-capable cable box. Connect the XBOX and the cable box to the receiver with the HDMI cables, and then plug the HDMI output on the receiver to the TV.
The wow factor of seeing a movie at a theater has always been very difficult to replicate at home. Televisions with large screens are starting to become more and more common, but surround sound at home requires far more effort. Running cables from the entertainment center to the speakers often involves going through floors and ceilings which can be difficult. A wireless Bose surround system can make experiencing full, sweeping surround sound at home much easier. The lack of wires to run all over the home theater room means less mess, and the surround sound experience stays fully in tact.
If you'd rather not deal with the clutter of speaker cabinets and stringing six or more cables across your room, check out the few HTIBs that use virtual surround speakers to reduce the speaker count to two or three. Unfortunately, sound quality and surround effects won't replicate true multichannel speaker systems.
Metals such as iron
check your surround sound if it has an HDMI or AV input jacks. if it has, then you are good to go. from your satellite receiver, attach the HDMI cable or AV cable. connect it to your surround sound. after connecting the satellite receiver box and surround sound, attach the HDMI or AV cable from the surround sound to your television.