My brother has turtle beach headphones and always put's them on but we can still hear the sound from his tv so I would say you can hear the sound through tv.
Magicka Sabers is a mod but I hear some person not naming who has developed a way to mod Skyrim on xbox 360 and is running tests on it so wait and you will be able to cya cuzz
I believe Ames is the guy in the hostage situation with the pacemaker. If you equip the microphone, and 'Aim' with it, you should hear a bleeping sound when it's in his direction. If i remember correctly, he is towards the end of one of the rows, is facing down, and has white hair (possibly a blue suit). Use the microphone and listen for the beeps is the best advice i can give.
Ls ( left stick) and rs (right stick) are the two joy sticks you push then in and you will hear a click and that's what it is.
If you go through an end portal you will get to the end and see/hear the Enderdragon.
They have a microphone and you either don't have one or yours isn't plugged in
No
If you need to see if your iPad microphone is working, an easy way to test it is to take a video of something with sound (yourself talking, the TV, the radio, etc.) When you play the video back, if you can hear it then you know that your microphone is working well.
you can tell them to cut the microphone moniter so you cant hear other people swearing and stuff like that. and also, theres nothing bad about xbox live, you can play with friends and meet other people.
When you hear yourself talk, most of the sound that you hear passed through the bones of the skull, not the air. These bones have resonances and act as filters changing the sound that arrives at your ears. When you hear yourself talk on a recording the sound passed through the air and is unfiltered, this is what other people hear when you talk So in fact you sound normal on the recording (as others hear you) and wierd when you just hear yourself directly. You just aren't used to hearing how you really sound.
download the device driver at the manufacturer's website
A microphone
Microphone.
If you are recording your voice with isolated headphones, and turn the 'monitor' option on (as in programs it is often called), you should be able to hear yourself through the microphone simultaneously as you sing. Of course, if you mean it the other way, you have to write/record it first before you can listen to it ;)
The microphone wasn't turned on, so the audience couldn't hear him singing.
Microphone
No, if the microphone is off, they shouldn't hear anything on your end.