I am by no means a sound/computer whiz, but the only way I know to get my amp to act as an eq/effect and then send that to my computer to be recorded is to use the output (located on the back of my amp) so that it will send all the sound it gets through it and then on to the next thing in the chain (which in this case is my sound card.)
P.S. - I just looked at the specs for your amp and it says that it has d.i. outputs and a line out. Try using one of those (Again, might be on the back of the amp). Hope it helps.
The pink, blue, and green slots on the black of a computer are designed to connect input and output audio devices. Pink is for the microphone, blue for inputs like turntables, and green for speakers.
None, as imput is not a real word. If you mean input then the Scanner, as it inputs data into the computer. The others are output devices. The printer outputs text or image on paper, the monitor outputs visuals and the speaker outputs sound.
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Yes. In fact, I would recommend doing this instead of just running the mics through your band's powered mixer. That way, all your drum sounds (pre-mixed) will fit into just one input on your band's powered mixer. It takes about a minimum of 6 or 7 mics to capture a drum kit properly and that's a hell of a lot of inputs to be using on your band's P.A. Just run the mics through your own mixer, then run your mixer's "Main 1" output to your band's P.A. input. Use a balanced cable. Also, if the mixer that you are using is unpowered, then get yourself a couple powered monitors to run directly off of it so you can have some monitoring without using one of the the P.A. monitors. If your drum mixer IS powered, however, just get yourself some speakers and you've got yourself some monitors. In a nutshell, I recommend getting a small powered mixer for your drum mics (something with 100W minimum) with unpowered monitors running right off of it (use the "Main 2" output). Connect the mixer's "Main 1" output to your band's P.A. system for the final mix. But remember, if you do it like this, you have to dial in a good mix on your drum mics through your own little mixer because the sound guy will only be able to adjust the volume of the drum kit AS A WHOLE through the main P.A. system. This is what I do and it works very well.
Yes, provided that your amp has line level inputs, and you have the appropriate adapters.
A cricket's ears are on its front legs, just below the knees and they have four acoustic inputs.
yes it has a computer to control the engine based on various inputs
A device, such as a keyboard, used to enter information into a computer.
Its protocol, ie. primary reasoning logic. Eg. A dumb computer deals with static and/or constant inputs. A smarter logic interprets inputs dynamically and/or variably.
The computer keyboard.
It is an Input devics because it inputs data into computer
Input, it is part of the mouse, which inputs the cursor position to the computer.
No, it inputs a signal to the computer so it's a Input Device.
Input When connected to a computer the camera inputs images
Depends on the inputs on the TV and outputs on the computer. You can use Firewire, USB, or component.
Front panel connectors, like USB's and audio inputs