A loud pop in the speakers is one of two things. 1. DC voltage from the amp instead of the normal AC. (If this is the case the amp is slowly burning the voice coils of the speakers.) 2. a large spike to the input of the amp from the cable box (this would be less common, but possible.) In either case the protection circuit of the amp should trip and this should never get to the speakers. The cause is not an ac problem from the wall. The problem is probably in the amp itself. Do yourself a favor and get a stereo tech check it out or get a new system. But if you let it continue you will not have any speakers.
there are many different parts to a computer such as screws and plastic
Optical networking hardware entails the various components used in optical technologies. Some of the common hardware include routers, optical fiber, electronic devices and so much more.
it uses optical technology
Optical memory is an early form of computer memory. It involves the use of an optical system for the writing and reading of data to and from a computer's main memory.
Emanuel Goldberg was the inventor of Optical Character Recognition. However, another man, Gustav Tauschek, patented the Optical Character Recognition.
Unless your Bose speakers have an optical digital input, no. There is no audio outputs or speaker outputs on this TV except for optical.
To hook up surround sound to your home entertainment system, you will need a receiver that supports surround sound, speakers, and speaker wires. Connect the speakers to the receiver using the appropriate wires, and then connect the receiver to your TV or media player using HDMI or optical cables. Adjust the settings on your receiver to enable surround sound, and enjoy immersive audio experience.
You can get an optical to coxial converter box if your receiver has a coaxial digital input. If it doesn't, you will have to purchase an optical digital to analog (D to A) converter.
If your home theater receiver has an optical audio input, plug it from the output of the TV to the input of the receiver.
120 channels / 80 channels on C band and 40 on L band
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.
A: Mostly for mullti channels communication
Well, honey, you grab an optical cable and connect the optical output on your Sony Bravia HDTV to the optical input on your Creative Inspire 5.1 speakers. Make sure to select the optical input on your speakers, and voila, you'll be blasting your TV shows and movies in surround sound like a boss. Just don't crank it up too loud and annoy the neighbors, unless you're feeling feisty.
It should be with lot of HDMI outputs and inputs as well, with lots of audio, and digital connections as cinches, optical, jacks, it should have equalizer as well. It depends on what speakers you have.
If your television has an "audio out" or "monitor out" with an audio connection you will be able to connect the television to the desired input on the av receiver. Use standard composite audio (Red and White/Black RCA) OR if the audio output on the television is digital you will need a digital coax or optical cable.
If your speakers are self amplified and have a coaxial or optical digital input, you can.
Surround sound system in a box is the cheapest option. Although the best one is going to be to buy separate speakers and connect them to a high quality A/V receiver. If you will be watching HD programming on anything then make sure you get one with HDMI ports. And for the best audio using optical audio cables are the way to go along with HDMI for video. Although for optical and HDMI you probably will need a separate A/V receiver and speakers. Bose makes nice speakers and Pioneer Eite will be one of the best receivers.