Sure, anything SMALLER than 10 amps.
Do not use any fuses larger than the circuitry was originally designed to use.
To avoid fire and catastrophic failure, a circuit capable of operating safely with 10 amps should never be required to carry more than that load.
A 13 amp fuse that is in-line with a computer plug would stop the computer from ever using more than 13 amps, and would blow the fuse to do so. Before doing that, make certain that the wire and all other devices up to and including the computer power supply can adequately deal with 13 amps.
If you mean the fuse in the plug that connects to the mains... no more than a 5 amp fuse.
Plug it into your computer and under videos (add) your videos
With normal battery voltage, pull the fuse to it, wait 10 seconds, then plug the fuse back in. The computer, with normal voltage, will "re-boot" properly.
check the other fuse.
Not 100% but if you open the fuse panel door just to the left and below the steering wheel, it looks like a computer diagnostic plug can be found there.
A fuse doesn't 'power' an electrical plug. A fuse protects the load supplied by that plug.
A fuse is fitted to a plug as a safety feature.
The auxiliary plug fuse can be found in the fuse box. The location of the fuse can be found on the inside cover of the fuse box.
Take the USB that came with it and plug the USB into your computer and the other side into your iPod. Then open iTunes on your computer
plug in your charger into your ipod or iphone and then plug in the other end to your computer
You would plug in a USB cable to the computer, and the other end of the cord connected to a Nintendo DSi.