Thanks. But I already have some solution and I'm not very fond of mixing and alike. Yours sincerly, Nick Pe 07 Jun 2005, la 11:40, Will Yardley <fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> a scris: > >On Mon, Jun 06, 2005 at 11:31:46PM -0400, Neal Rhodes wrote: > >> Now, you could have 4 sets of powered speakers plus the CD player. >> Or you could find something to mix the 3 outputs together and run >> it to a single set of speakers. Or even use the AUX input on the CD >> player. > >A small pro audio mixer[1] would do it, but if you don't mind >matching the levels of the various devices (and if you don't mind >the occasional "shock" when you forget to do this), and don't need >to listen to more than one device at once, you could use a passive >switching box (Radio Shack probably still sells one[2]) that takes >in 3-4 sets of RCA ins and lets you switch between them to a single >output. Making such a box isn't difficult either (a multi-position >rotary switch would probably be your best bet in that case). > >You could use Y adapters, but this would not be the preferred solution - >it would probably result in degraded signal quality and problems >matching levels. > >You could also do some daisy-chaining (i.e., plug the laptop into the >line in of the desktop, use your music player software to play music >directly off the mp3 player if possible, etc.) and try to play >everything out of your desktop (using the builtin mixer software to >adjust the relative levels). > >[1] http://www.bswusa.com/proditem.asp?item=UB802 > http://www.bswusa.com/proditem.asp?item=POWERMIXIII > http://www.bswusa.com/proditem.asp?item=BLEND6 >etc. > >[2] http://www.radioshack.com/product.asp?catalog%5Fname=CTLG&product%5Fid=15-1983 > >w > >-- >fedora-list mailing list >fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx >To unsubscribe: http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list