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Generally the adds are in conventional sound, not Dolby Digital or any superior sound. So when the movie starts the sound switches to the better sound, which you appear to have not connected it up or have not get the right sound settings selected. So you hear nothing. The Blue Ray player might have to have a either an RCA cable connection, or more likely an optical lead to hear the Dolby Sound types.
You mean add-on ASUS sound card?
You will get better sound and maybe ASIO driver support.
On board HD audio requires more CPU cycles and does not support low latency ASIO drivers.
The audio card is built-in on the motherboard and cannot be changed. You can install an USB sound device and you may need to disable thw on-board audio in the BIOS or mute it.
Go to edit - preferences - click on Setup and look at the bottom of the windows and you will see "Turn on Quickens Sounds". Check this box and your sounds will start working.
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It seems like your sound card driver is not installed correctly! Refer to Dell website, search for your laptop's model and download its corresponding sound card driver...
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Clean the fans. when a fan is rotating it impacts on dust particles at high speed this causes build up and an imballance which causes airflow disruption (noise). As long as you can get sound out of it I don't see the problem, Most stand alone cards give a better sound quality than inbuilt audio chips anyway. Also, they give more control over the sound output.
That model just has plain sterio output. The chassis does not accept add-on cards, so you will need to get a USB based sound card to get the better sound.
You don't say what application you are using when you get the sound, so it's difficult to diagnose.
However, you could simply turn off sound. In XP go to Start>Control Panel>Sounds and look for the volume tab. Check the Mute box.
Obviously this will disable all sound.
If you would like a better solution please add a comment here and provide details of your operating system and the application that is causing the problem.
You won`t get surround sound mix with 2 speakers, you can have a 2nd zone but this will only play a "Stereo Sound" if you have that playback option with the SC-RT50, what you will need is a speaker selector switch or better known as an A & B switch, this will ideally run from the front left and right speaker output of the receiver into the A & B switch then run into each pair of speakers inside or outside, what is common nowdays are receiver that are known as 2nd zone connections where you can have 2 sets of speaker in different rooms, unfortunatly the SC-PT50 does not have this option.
The sound cards in the laptops usually they are built in on the motherboard and can not be replaced. If you want to add better sound to your notebook you can connect an external device like Sound Blaster Audigy 2 ZS Notebook PCMCIA Sound Card to get better sound performance to your laptop.
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