A 15 PIN cable is a VGA cable and the yellow, white and red RCA connectors are for composite video and 2 channel audio.
Converting VGA to composite needs more than a cable adaptor and will always substantially reduce the quality of the image.
Many modern televisions have red, green and blue inputs with one or two synchronizing inputs. If the television has a set of connectors like this it may well handle VGA signals. There are some converters that will combine the two sync signals in a VGA signal into a single signal that most other RGB signals use. Note that you will need to send audio via a different input other than your VGA of course
Before investing in any hardware, read and study the manual for the television. Most will make reference to VGA signals and whether or not they can be used.
Another alternative is to use a DVI or HDMI dsplay output from the computer. Display ports that connect to a USB port can be purchased at a relatively low cost and they will provide a full quality interface to most televisions with an HDMI input. DVI is compatible with HDMI in that they carry the same video information. DVI does not carry audio so once again, a separate audio connection will be required if a DVI display port is used.
lime green, black and yellow
The Bose 321 system does not support Hi-Def inputs, so the best idea is to use it just for sound. Connect the digital audio output of the Cable box to the optical input of the 321. Connect an HDMI cable from the Cable box to the TV directly.
To connect a Sanyo TV to a Magnavox box, first, use an HDMI cable to connect the HDMI output on the Magnavox box to one of the HDMI inputs on the Sanyo TV. If your Magnavox box has component or composite outputs instead, use the corresponding cables (red, green, blue for component; red, white, yellow for composite) to connect it to the respective inputs on the TV. Once connected, turn on both devices and select the correct input source on the Sanyo TV to view the Magnavox box content.
You will need an RCA to HDMI converter to connect the Nintendo 64 to a new TV, as most modern TVs do not have the older RCA inputs. Simply connect the yellow, red, and white cables from the Nintendo 64 to the converter, and then connect the HDMI output from the converter to the HDMI input on your TV.
Connect the single connection end of the AV cable that comes with the Wii into the back of the system. Then match the red, white, and yellow inputs to the back or front of the TV depending where they are located.
To connect a Nintendo 64 to an AT&T U-verse setup, use the RCA composite cables (red, white, and yellow) that come with the console. Connect the yellow video cable to the yellow input on your TV and the red and white audio cables to the corresponding audio inputs. If your TV has multiple AV inputs, select the correct one using the remote. Finally, ensure that your U-verse box is set to the appropriate channel to avoid interference.
You would need a red, yellow, white audio video cable.
Try to connect yellow into the green input while using red and white to the matching inputs. If this does not work, you may need a converter box sold about anywhere online RCA to digital/HDMi converter.
You can connect your standard definition TV to your satellite receiver in a couple of ways. First, if your TV has composite video/audio inputs (yellow, red, and white RCA jacks), you can connect to these inputs using the composite video outputs of the satellite receiver. Another alternative is to use the standard coaxial cable output from your satellite receiver to connect to the 75ohm antenna input on your TV. *Note: Neither of these connections will display high definition programming on your standard definition TV. The TV is only capable of standard definition, so you will see a clear picture, but it won't be true high definition, regardless of the input signal's definition.
Go out from the dish set-top box and into the vcr and then out from vcr into the tv. Most receivers have outputs that are RCA (Yellow/Red/White). On the back of your VCR, you should have inputs for RCA. Also have inputs on the back of the Television. There are two ways to go if it is a non-HD receiver: Coaxial and RCA ---- Take the cable output from the back of the receiver (it says "out to tv") and connect that to the input on the VCR. Then take another cable and attach it to the output on the VCR and connect that to the TV's input. This requires you to set the TV to either channel 3 or 4 depending on the setup on the VCR. ---- Take the RCA (Yellow/Red/White) from the receiver to the VCR inputs and plug them in. Hookup the VCR to the TV using the Coax or using the RCA output on the VCR. Note: this will require you to set the VCR to the TV/VCR setting in order to view the Video/Audio output. This would require either changing the channel (Coax output) or changing the TV's video input.
The color coded A/V plug for the PS3 has a red white and yellow RCA type plugs that are used to connect the PS3 for a standard resolution TV connection when inserted into the TVs color coded inputs. The A/V cable can be used on any TV that has the 3 RCA inputs whether it is HD or Standard Resolution
Some TVs only have an ANT/Cable in and few Flat Screens are built that way. See what kind of inputs your TV has if it does not have RCA style plugs. If you are saying that you only have a single Input that you are using for your cable then you need to purchase a device to switch different sources or upgrade your TV