SOURCE: Using built-in Telex mic?
There should be microphone cable that plugs in the back of the monitor to the back of the pc microphone jack. It's color coded PINK.
SOURCE: Muffled voices in video playback
Hi,
Withe the indulgence of Lemmor....
To my knowledge most Archos units share the same circuitry for the audio playback whether they be for lineout, built-in speaker and/or headset. And since they are digital in nature, then it can be presumed that the quality would also be the same all through it whatever medium is used to listen to. Hence a missing codec would effect all and not only headset(s).
Having said that, may it be possible that there is nothing wrong with the Archos unit but rather with the frequency response of the headset themselves. Of course the fastest way to verify this would be to use an alternative headset.
Hope this be of initial help/idea. Pls post back how things turned up or should you need additional information.
Good luck and kind regards.
Thank you for using FixYa.
SOURCE: polycom soundstation Ex - no dial tone
Someone in our office recently damaged the RJ-45 cable for our
Polycom Soundstation. Because the jack was damaged I could not
determine the order of the cables. After a call to polycom, we found
the pinout information we needed - so I thought I would share, in case
anyone else finds themselves in a similar situation:
With the RJ-45 prong pointing down the wires, from left to right are:
Then Crimp and test. I got this information directly from Polycom
for use with the Polycom Soundstation. This information was not easy to
get. They originally told me they could not provide the information and
I would have to buy a power adapter. This is not true, just trim the
cable and follow the above instructions.
SOURCE: Hp Dv6000, problems recording with built in microphones
For Vista:
1) go to Start > Control Panel > Sound
2) click the recording tab
3) Right click the device that is not the new one you bought.
4) choose Disable
For XP:
1) Right click My Computer or go to Start > Control Panel > System
2) On the system window click the hardware tab
3) Click the Device Manager button
4) Scroll down to the Sound, video and game controllers.
5) Look for any device that is not your new mic as well as your sound card.
6) Right click and disable anything that are not the mentioned above.
7) Exit and test.
If you have XP and the XP Method above doesnt work then please make a comment stating so so I can give you another solution.
SOURCE: how do i disable my built in microphone?
double click on the sound icon in sys tray to access properties and disable from there or just turn the slider all the way down
See Adjust volume below
To use any microphone with your
computer you will need to enable it in control panel. Instructions are for Windows XP but are similar for Vista
and Win7
Click START, CONTROL PANEL, SOUNDS
& AUDIO DEVICES
Click VOICE
In Sounds & Audio Devices
Properties window locate SOUND PLAYBACK box. Click VOLUME button.
Make sure that there is not a check-mark in the MUTE box against
microphone in the list of devices and the volume slider is at the top of
the scale.
Ensure the MUTE ALL box
isn't checked before closing window.
Click VOLUME button in SOUND RECORDING BOX. Here SELECT microphone as an input source for
recording (as opposed to un-checking mute in the playback
controls).
NOTE if microphone is not listed in the
2 sets of volume controls click OPTIONS, PROPERTIES on the tool-bar and
place a check against microphone in the list entitled
'show the following volume controls' and then click OK. The same applies to 'Internal MIC' if you are using a laptop with built in microphone - this must be enabled/ disabled separately to the external MIC.
To adjust audio volume.
Under VOLUME tab adjust Device Volume as necessary. Also (under Loudpeaker Settings) click Speaker Volume and adjust slider to suit.
You can also put a check mark in the box to show the volume control icon on the Task Bar so you can go straight to it to in future
108 views
Usually answered in minutes!
×