Component caries a better picture but you will need 2 extra cables for the audio.
and my composite cable is a phono cable n the cable is for my ps3
Composite RCA will be better than a coaxial cable (RG6). The order of quality and maximum resolution from best to worst is: HDMI (including HDMI 1.4 3D) DVI Component Video S-Video Composite Coaxial cable
Yes. The Direct TV hookup is the box alone, from the box can come a cable, HDMI and even Composite outputs.
You need to use component or S video connection with an optional PS3 A/V cable connection cable
An RCA cable with composite video is better than standard definition cable. An RCA cable set (3 cables) can also carry a component video signal, which can be Hugh definition up to 1080p. Cable television can also carry a high definition signal if you have a HD cable box or a TV with a digital tuner. For connecting a VCR, an RCA composite video cable will give a better picture than the RF antenna cable.
You will either need a composite(not component) cable or a HDMI cable. I think you can use S-Video but S-Video doesn't compare to HDMI or composite.
Your best bet is to buy an HDTV (if you haven't already) and then buy an HDMI cable, and also a component cable hookup for you in able to connect your Wii using the HDMI cable. Otherwise, USB cable won't do.
If you have a psp component or composite cable you can watch video from your Psp on your TV, but to view games on your TV, you need the composite cable and a progressive scan tv (Newer HDTVs).
Yes, you can but you won't get the true colors displayed on the TV. The component cable uses 3 leads (green, blue, and red) for the video where composite only uses 1 (yellow). The audio is white and red for both types of cable.
Ethernet cable or a special usb cable A-B
You need a XSATA Hookup/cable or an Xplorer 360 Hookup/cable.
Using the composite cables (yellow, white, red) that are provided with the Wii. You also have the ability to purchase a component cable (red, green blue & red white) and connect them to the TV accordingly. Some newer HDTV's may not have a composite input so you may need the component cable. Some may also have the green component input double as the yellow composite input. I have seen this primarily on Samsung TV's.