Sound Cards
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Some computers have build in sound capabilities,
while others require an additional component known as an expansion
card or sound card.
Most sound cards are used for listening to music or watching
videos; other functions of the sound card are music composition
and video editing. Sound cards can also be used during presentations
for work or for educational purposes, even playing video games. |
The sound card facilitates (directs, processes, and oversees),
audio signals that are inputted and outputted both to and from the
computer under the control of the computers' programs. Sound is
the vibration of molecules of gas, liquid and/or solid objects that
produce frequencies that are that are detectable by ears.
From 20 Hz to 20,000 Hz (20 KHz) is the frequency range that humans
have the capability of hearing. Sound cards have the ability to
produce these frequencies and ones above and below the human range
of hearing. Sound cards can take digital data that has been recorded
or generated and put it in analog format, the process is known as
digital-to-analog converting. Normally external devices, such as
speakers, headphones or amplifiers connect with the output port
on the sound card so that the multimedia and programs can be heard.
Normally a sound card has a line in connector so that recorded
audio can be transferred on to a computer, digitized and stored
on the hard drive for storage, editing or processing. Microphone
connectors are another common external source, for use by microphones
and other input devices. Voice recognition software and voice over
applications input through a microphone jack for polyphonic songs
or music. Polyphony is the ability a sound card possesses, that
allows more than one voice or sound to play at the same time, independent
of each other.
All of today's sound cards provide actual hardware polyphony and
are usually referred to as "hardware audio accelerators"
but actual voice polyphony is only one of today's features. 3D sound
and positional audio (Example: A quarter sounds different to the
person standing next to it than it does to the person standing across
the room, when the quarter falls to the floor.), and real-time DSP
effects (Digital Sound Playback) are affected by the hardware acceleration
of today's sound cards by being emitted cleaner and clearer.
The connection ports of the modern sound card are color coded each
has a representing symbol for easy for easy identification purposes,
as per the System Design Guide for PCs. The Pink connection port
is for the microphone; Light Blue is for the audio input; Lime Green
is for the audio output (speakers or headphones); Brown or Dark
is for Right-to-left speaker; Orange is for the speaker output (subwoofer);
Gold or Grey is for games ports or MIDIs (Musical Instrument Digital
Interface).
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