You have to have a spot in the back of your computer on a sound card. Check to see if all your sound settings are turned on/up enough in volume and advanced. Make sure you dont have 'digital only' selected in advanced, under play control.
Yes! there is, this is how, but first, what Audio Output do you have on the record player itself? Is it a single small input plug, or a white and red output plug?
No, it has audio inputs, not output. You would connect the speakers to whatever your source is (your computer, game console, DVD player...)
An input device is a piece of hardware that you put data into the computer, such as a mouse or keyboard. An output device is something that the computer controls to output data, such as the screen or speakers.
Make sure your computer settings have allowed the aux output of your computer to actually act as an output - some computers have a 3.5mm input (the aux input) that acts as both an input and an output (the Macbook Pro 13inch is an example) and in control panel you need to set it to output, no input. Also, if you have several 3.5mm input/outputs then you need to make sure you're plugging the speakers into the right plug - it will be a green one that usually has a picture of some headphones next to it. It may be an issue with your speakers, test with an iPod or something similar to see if they even work. Sometimes it is even just an issue with your volume on the computer when you put the speakers in, check for that, too. Hope this helps.
No, the output of most DVD players are analog stereo (front channel only) or digital optical or coaxial. The DVD player must be connected to a surround sound receiver, and then the front and rear speakers can be connected to that.
Any of the Sony models will give out great bass output to any set of speakers.
speaker is an output device. It is said as an output device because, most of the speakers are used to hear audio/sounds. The inputs to hear sound from a speaker can be > power/electricity > a device to play the sound (that may be a mic, vcd, dvd, mp3 player or even your computer)
A loudspeaker is used so a large crowd can hear what is being spoken. They are often found in schools, sporting events, festivals, and many more.
Plug the power plug into a wall socket and plug the jack into the green port on the back of your computer. The speakers probably have volume on them but you can change the volume from the computer if you want by pressing Start -> Control panel -> Sounds and Audio devices.
Output, the sound is coming from the computer. Headphones are output; they produce something after receiving signal from another device, such as a computer or electronic player. When you use headphones they go in the output port of your computer.
If you have a DVD player and just the speakers, no. You will need a system with an amplifier. Some of the Onida systems include this. Connect the digital audio output of the DVD player to the amplifier.
The RCA's from the amp will be arn to the CD player, then you need to connect the speaker's wire to the output + and - of the amp, this will cause the amp to have musical power from your radio, and the speakers to have the power from the amp..-Shocker