Not sure if they do anything. VGA is a video output on computer not audio, so will convert to the Yellow composite or S/Video cable. Red and white composite cables are for audio and with no audio coming from the VGA I cant see why they are included. Does anyone know or are they just a waste of space.
White is Left and Red is Right , White is never right is another way to remember. This question has been answered by Hoffman from Batavia New York
depends on the type of connection you have. if you cant come out of the laptop any other way then plug into the headphone jack with a cable that ends in a left right rca connection (the red and white cable) and plug that into your speakers.
Red represents the right channel
a usb cable has four wires, two for power and two for communication.
Depends on what you mean by audio, if you mean audio as in the 3 cables that connect into your tv (i.e red, yellow and white) then attach the red and the white (as they both control stereo sound) If you are on about hd cables then attach the blue and green cables into the appropriate sockets in the back of the plasma screen. If you are on about audio hi-fi or audio system then use the twin cable and plug both ends into their appropriate sockets Jackson, =D
Several different ways.. First you can buy a HDMI cable( which is expensive) that cable is the most simplest. The red, white and yellow on the HD box is the composite connection . Another way is component which is red, green, and blue. those connections are for video only you will need to connection your audio as well white and red . You can use the red and white audio connections from composite or component . To keep things simple use the output from the HD box to the input of your TV.
In a set of cables with red, black (or white) and yellow cables, the yellow cable is a composite video cable.
A composite cable is one that has three video (Red, Green, Blue) cables and 2 audio (Red, White) cables.
The colors of the RGB cable stands for several things. If your cable has one red, one white, and one yellow colored connector it is called a composite cable. The yellow connector is the video, while the white and red are the left and right audio cables.
A red-white-yellow (RWY) cable is designed for stereo audio and composite video. A red-green-blue cable is designed for component video on your DVD player. Most RWY cables will have the yellow cable noticeably thicker than the red and white. This is because there is extra shielding in the video cable to avoid interference. While short runs of RWY cable can be used for component video, the picture can suffer if there is electrical interference in the Red and White cables because of reduced shielding.
Yes, you can but you won't get the true colors displayed on the TV. The component cable uses 3 leads (green, blue, and red) for the video where composite only uses 1 (yellow). The audio is white and red for both types of cable.
Using the composite cables (yellow, white, red) that are provided with the Wii. You also have the ability to purchase a component cable (red, green blue & red white) and connect them to the TV accordingly. Some newer HDTV's may not have a composite input so you may need the component cable. Some may also have the green component input double as the yellow composite input. I have seen this primarily on Samsung TV's.
Any standard definition or HD television which has composite (yellow, red and white cable) or component (red, green and blue cable) inputs is fully compatible with the Playstation. There is no need for a special adapter.
You can connect your DISH receiver to your Bravia TV using one of 4 methods: Coax cable connected to your coax port (non HD receiver) RCA (composite cable) - yellow, white, and red tips Component cable/ audio cable - Green, blue, red, white, and red (white and red for audio), HD receiver or HDMI cable (HD receiver). The component and HDMI give the highest video and audio quality. To receive HD programming, you need an HD receiver and HD programming package.
It is one cord of a RCA connector (red and white audio cable or a red/white/yellow cable). To hookup my sub woofer from the receiver I separated a red and white cable and just one of them.
The yellow cable can be used for the green wire, but cheap white/red/yellow (composite video + audio) cables will have issues working as component video cables for longer lengths, as they usually have poor shielding.
All 7000-series models come with two component and two composite video inputs. Using the cable that comes with the console you should be able to connect your Wii to one of the composite inputs. (These have a yellow port for video, plus a white and red port for audio. These are usually labelled as A/V or S-Video.) If you have a Wii component cable (a cable with red, green and blue connectors for video plus red and white for audio) this can be connected to the component port. The Wii does not support HDMI.