It depends on the speakers. Bose computer speakers are not designed to connect directly to speaker inputs on your receiver, as they have their own amplifier. All Bose home stereo speakers can be connected.
Most turn tables have speaker plugs.
The speakers and subwoofer plug into your receiver.
A Sony PlayStation 2 and a dish receiver are two video and audio sources, and cannot be directly connected to each other. You can plug both into a television that has multiple video and audio inputs, or connect them to a home theater receiver, and then connect that to your TV.
The direct answer to this would be, no. But I think you might be asking the wrong question. To get surround sound to play your television programs you would need to put your cable/satellite box through the receiver. As a side note: There are two ways to do this. 1. If you receiver supports video pass thru (which would mean that there are VIDEO IN jacks and VIDEO OUT jacks) If not then proceed to the next option. You will hook up everything from the cable/satellite box to the receiver and just one cable, which will be the video signal, to the television. 2. You will hook up only the audio cables to the receiver and a single video cable straight to the television.
Speakers: You will need at least two for front and two for back plus one subwoofer. Source: A DVD or Blu-Ray player or some other media player Display: A television set or monitor to display the image Receiver: A surround-sound capable receiver to plug everything together. This may have a built-in media player.
Most turn tables have speaker plugs.
The speakers and subwoofer plug into your receiver.
Yes, you can plug Cinemate speakers in a GS II module.
If the speakers are not powered (they don't plug into the wall), you can cut off the RCA plug, strip back the wires to a negative and positive lead, and connect them to the speaker posts of the receiver.
Absolutely! It has an audio port, just like any windows machine. If there's nothing plugged into it, then the mac will use the built in crummy speakers (actually they're sort of OK but they're crap as compared to the Bose stuff!) if you plug in your speakers, doesn't matter what kind, it will push out sound through the good speakers.
That depends. If they're computer speakers and all your wires are headphone-jack style, then all you do is run the headphone wire from your speakers and plug it into your computer speaker input on the sound card, or a headphone jack. If they're not computer speakers and you want to wire component speakers through your computer, you'll need a receiver to power them, speaker wire to go from your speakers to the receiver, and a cable to go from your receiver "input jack" to your computer. That cable should have a red and white RCA on one end, and a headpone jack on the other.
Certainly! All you'll need is a mini-to-mini adapter to insert into your car's receiver.
A Sony PlayStation 2 and a dish receiver are two video and audio sources, and cannot be directly connected to each other. You can plug both into a television that has multiple video and audio inputs, or connect them to a home theater receiver, and then connect that to your TV.
Plug the audio system into the AUDIO OUTPUT jacks on the LCD. Go into the menu and change the signal to the jacks to FIXED if you can.
You need to plug the speakers into a sound output plug on your computer; often, the speakers will also require a separate connection to a power source.
Sound On, Audiodengine, logitech, and hp all make speakers that plug into a usb port.
The Purtone HPD-710 system consists of passive speakers that need an amplifier to drive them. Unfortunately, even the subwoofer needs an amp. An Emerson TV will not have speaker outputs, it will have RCA line-level outputs. You must plug the TV into a surround-sound receiver to amplify the signal. Then connect speaker cables from the receiver to the Purtone speakers. Since the sub has no amp, you will need a receiver with a subwoofer amp function, which are not common.