Because you are causing a short between the two contacts that normally pick up he signal from the sound card.
Upgrading your computer speakers will also a greater range of sound to be broadcast, so in most cases, new speakers would give you an increase in sound quality.
Yes, you can connect your desktop to your home audio speakers. The audio cable would go from your sound card to your home audio receiver which in turn would play out of the speakers. However, it would be much easier to use your desktop computer sound with desktop speakers. Desktop speakers can be plugged directly into you computer through a usb cable or audio cable and are available in a two speaker set or surround sound set ups. anonymous@oola.com
Buying cheap computer speakers is not the best choice, as the speakers become the device's audio output. All the hours spent on the computer can be more enjoyable when you connect the computer to a good audio system.
If you are referring to the original internal computer speaker in IBM compatible computers, then it connects to the chipset on the motherboard or the programmable interval controller. If you mean internal speakers on systems that play modern sound out the internal speakers, then they would connect to the sound card or an integrated sound chip on the motherboard.
if they could they would be called car speakers not computer
The brand of computer speakers you would buy for your small business would depend on what type of computer you are running and what you need your speakers to do. www.testfreaks.com/pc-speakers/ will give you a comparison to work from.
I'm not sure if you are comparing your iPod to other ones, but in the 4th gen. they have louder speakers. If you are using a 3rd gen. then the sound would be a little quieter.
You can edit the sound and amplify certain frequencies, but if your speakers cannot produce those frequencies you are lacking, there is no program that will compensate. I would look to upgrade your speaker first, and then determine what is lacking in the sound.
You should try to clean the inside of your computer tower. The same thing happened to me. Vacuum it and wipe it off.
If you performed this task with the computer running (power on), you may have shorted out the sound card. Always, when installing or removing any electrical/sound connection from the back of a PC, turn it off first.
This could be any number of problems. Check to make sure that the power cable for your speakers is plugged in first. After that it could be any number of issues from software to hardware. The most likely culprits are the speakers themselves or the system's sound card. If you have warranty on your computer I would recommend contacting the manufacturer for specific support for your system.
French speakers would say "on reste en contact" for "keep in touch"