About: Headphones   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/TGVw_48bfxR4O_s_eW_eZQ==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Headphones are a small stereo loudspeaker system that can be worn on the head.

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Headphones
rdfs:comment
  • Headphones are a small stereo loudspeaker system that can be worn on the head.
  • Headphones is an acessory
  • The Headphones are a head item in Club Penguin Rewritten. They cost 350 coins in the Penguin Style.
  • Headphones are items in Donkey Kong 64 that restore the power of a Kong's instrument when touched. The headphones provide an unlimited amount of power for the Kongs' instrument. These items start appearing when Donkey Kong learns his Bongo Blast move. They are often found in areas containing Music Pads.
  • Headphones date from the beginnings of the history of the telephone and the radio. The weak electrical signals of the early instruments were enough to operate only headphones audibly. Beyerdynamic is considered to have officially invented headphones in the late 1930s and was the first company to market headphones to the public. Source Wikipedia:Headphones
  • Headphones (also known as earphones, earbuds, stereophones, headsets, or the slang term cans) are a pair of transducers that receive an electrical signal from a media player or receiver and use speakers placed in close proximity to the ears (hence the name earphone) to convert the signal into audible sound waves.
sameAs
dcterms:subject
Unlock
  • Yes
dbkwik:club-pengui...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:clubpenguin...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:donkeykong/...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:clubpenguin...iPageUsesTemplate
Found
Member
  • Yes/No
DE
  • Kopfhörer
Name
  • Headphones
Type
ImageSize
  • x160px
dbkwik:shopping/pr...iPageUsesTemplate
Available
  • Yes
  • No
Party
  • None
Ru
  • Наушники
Cost
  • 350(xsd:integer)
Fr
  • Le Casque à Ecouteurs
dbkwik:club-pengui...iPageUsesTemplate
Image
  • Headphones .png
Pt
  • Fones de Ouvido
ID
  • 481(xsd:integer)
  • 10481(xsd:integer)
ES
  • Auriculares
abstract
  • Headphones (also known as earphones, earbuds, stereophones, headsets, or the slang term cans) are a pair of transducers that receive an electrical signal from a media player or receiver and use speakers placed in close proximity to the ears (hence the name earphone) to convert the signal into audible sound waves. Headphones date from the beginnings of the history of the telephone and the radio. The weak electrical signals of the early instruments were enough to operate only headphones audibly. Beyerdynamic is considered to have officially invented headphones in the late 1930s, and was the first company to market headphones to the public. Headphones are normally detachable, using a jack plug. Typical products to which they are attached include , CD player, Minidisc player, digital audio player (MP3 player), and personal computer. Headphones can also be used with full-size stereo components. Some headphone units are self-contained, incorporating a radio receiver. Other headphones are cordless, using radio (for example analogue FM, digital Bluetooth, Wi-Fi) or infrared signals to receive signals from a base unit. Headphones may be used to prevent other people from hearing the sound either for privacy or to prevent disturbance, as in listening in a public library. They can also provide a level of sound quality that could only be matched by loudspeakers costing a great deal more. This is especially true in the bass (low frequency) region, where loudspeaker-listening room interactions normally cause resonant modes so that even with the best speakers a listener in a given place hears some bass notes too loudly and others too softly. Good headphones, with a good seal to the ear can have an extremely flat low-frequency response down to 20 Hz within 3dB (though claims such as 'frequency response 4 Hz to 20 kHz' and are just marketing hype based on the fact that the headphone has some output at 4 Hz, however small). Headphones of the 'closed back' type are also used to exclude external sounds, particularly in sound recording studios and in noisy environments. Headphones can also be useful for videogames that use 3D positional audio, allowing players to better judge the position of an offscreen sound (such as the footsteps of an opponent). The two common connectors are 1/4" and 3.5 mm plug. Headphones designed for home stereo systems and recording studios use the older 1/4" connector. Sony introduced the 3.5mm connector in 1979, adapting the older monophonic 3.5mm connector for use with its Walkman personal stereo. Advantages of the smaller connector include lower bulk, weight and cost. This smaller connector is more prevalent today due to the popularity of portable music devices, although aftermarket headphones sometimes include an adapter for compatibility with the larger connector.
  • Headphones are a small stereo loudspeaker system that can be worn on the head.
  • Headphones is an acessory
  • The Headphones are a head item in Club Penguin Rewritten. They cost 350 coins in the Penguin Style.
  • Headphones are items in Donkey Kong 64 that restore the power of a Kong's instrument when touched. The headphones provide an unlimited amount of power for the Kongs' instrument. These items start appearing when Donkey Kong learns his Bongo Blast move. They are often found in areas containing Music Pads.
  • Headphones date from the beginnings of the history of the telephone and the radio. The weak electrical signals of the early instruments were enough to operate only headphones audibly. Beyerdynamic is considered to have officially invented headphones in the late 1930s and was the first company to market headphones to the public. Source Wikipedia:Headphones
is Clothes of
is wikipage disambiguates of
Alternative Linked Data Views: ODE     Raw Data in: CXML | CSV | RDF ( N-Triples N3/Turtle JSON XML ) | OData ( Atom JSON ) | Microdata ( JSON HTML) | JSON-LD    About   
This material is Open Knowledge   W3C Semantic Web Technology [RDF Data] Valid XHTML + RDFa
OpenLink Virtuoso version 07.20.3217, on Linux (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu), Standard Edition
Data on this page belongs to its respective rights holders.
Virtuoso Faceted Browser Copyright © 2009-2012 OpenLink Software