The sound card takes data from the computer ... which came from the internet ... makes sound from the data, and sends the sound back to the computer so that you can listen to it through the computer's speakers or earphone jack. The place you want to connect to the stereo is one of the little jacks on the computer that's marked for either earphones or "line out". The only problem you'll have is a minor one ... getting a cable made up with the right kind of plugs on it, to fit the computer's output jack at one end and the stereo's input jacks at the other end.
You can connect a 14 speaker jack to a home tuner stereo receiver using the RCA connector.
iPad has a 3.5-mm stereo headphone jack so yes you can connect your earphonesInput and outputDock connector port3.5-mm stereo headphone jackBuilt-in speakerMicrophoneMicro SIM card tray (Wi-Fi + 3G model only)
You should be able to get a cable that has a 3.5mm jack at one end, and the red & white audio connectors at the other. Plug the 3.5mm end into the sound output jack on your computer, and the red & white connectors into the corresponding connectors on your stereo. Put the stereo into auxiliary mode and you're done.
A 14 speaker jack can be connected to a stereo tuner music receiver via an RCA connector.
Technically, yes. However, a headphone jack does not provide a great deal of power, so you would probably need an amplifier for the sound output to actually be audible.
You would need a stereo 3.5mm jack to take the sound from the laptop, and depending on the inputs on the board you would likely use 2 mono 1/4'' jacks.
Find your sound card (The card with 3 or more different headphone jacks), and install the cord from the speakers into the 3.5mm Green Jack, or the one labeled Speakers.
You can either hook up a stereo system (providing Line-In RCAs), or the TV, directly to your computer's sound card output. Video connectors such as VGA, DVI and others (except RF and HDMI) carry only video signals, so audio must be connected separately. Most LCD television sets sport 2x RCA audio-in connectors - connect your sound card's output there, using a stereo-mini-jack-to-2xRCA cable.
purchase a 5.1 sound card & 3.5mm jack to rca converter wires 3 in numbers ,then you can easily connect Philips 2200 with your hp laptop. link for sound card: http://us.creative.com/products/welcomenew.asp?category=1 link for 3.5mm jack to rca: http://www.anvsoft.com/eshop/description.php?productId=2570&category=12344
plug the speakers in and if necessary download a driver or if there are built in speakers go to sound settings --------------------- Connect a pair of speakers of headphones to the audio jack at the back (usually) of your computer. If there is no jack, you will need to install a 'sound card' available at most major computer retailers.
Your laptop should have a plug for a stereo miniature phone jack, which is the same type used for stereo headphones. A patch cable which has this type of plug at one end, and a pair of RCA plugs at the other is widely available. By pluging the miniature phone jack into the laptop, and the RCA plugs into the input jacks of the stereo, you should be able to listen to the laptop over the stereo. This solution works, but the sound output through the headphone jack for most laptops is equalized for headphones. It is heavy on the base and light on higher frequencies. It will not be satisfactory for many people.