SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Lecture No. 3  Computer Hardware Components:  CPU, Memory, and I/O By ROY FEROLINO, BSCS, MBA Lyceum of the Philippines University CAVITE
Computer Hardware Components In this chapter: How did the computer become known as the stored-program computer?  Do they all have the same characteristics? Memory on chips and memory on magnetic media, how do they differ? What do you look for when comparing memory devices? How is information moved around within the computer? How can you help your computer run  better ? ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
Basic Concepts of  Computer Hardware This model of the typical digital computer is often called the  von Neumann  computer. Programs and data are stored in the same memory:  primary memory. The computer can only perform one instruction at a time. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3- CPU (Central Processing Unit) Input Units Output Units Primary Memory
Basic Concepts of  Computer Hardware Input/Output (I/O): Refers to the process of getting information into and out of the computer. Input: Those parts of the computer receiving information to programs. Output: Those parts of the computer that provide results of computation to the person using the computer. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
Sources of Data for the Computer Two types of data stored within a computer: Original data  or  information : Data being introduced to a computing system for the first time.  Computers can deal directly with printed text, pictures, sound, and other common types of information. Previously stored data  or  information : Data that has already been processed by a computer and is being stored for later use. These are forms of binary data useful only to the computer.  Examples: Floppy disks, DVD disks, and music CDs. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
Input Devices Two categories of input hardware: Those that deal with original data. Those that handle previously stored data. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
Input Devices Input hardware:  Those that deal with original data. Keyboard Mouse Voice recognition hardware Scanner Digital camera Digitizing: The process of taking a visual image, or audio recording and converting it to a binary form for the computer. Used as data for programs to display, play or manipulate the digitized data. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
Input Devices Connecting Hardware to the computer: Hardware needs access through some general input/output connection. Port : The pathway for data to go into and out of the computer from external devices such as keyboards.  There are many standard ports as well as custom electronic ports designed for special purposes. Ports follow standards that define their use.  SCSI, USB:  Multiple peripheral devices (chain).  RS-232, IDE: Individual peripheral devices. Peripheral device : A piece of hardware like a printer or disk drive, that is outside the main computer. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
Input Devices Connecting Hardware to the computer: (continued) Hardware needs software on the computer that can service the device. Device driver : Software addition to the operating system that will allow the computer to communicate with a particular device. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
Input Devices Common Basic Technologies for Storing Binary Information: Electronic Magnetic Optical ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
Input Devices Electronic Circuits Most expensive of the three forms for storing binary information. A flip-flop circuit has either one electronic status or the other. It is said to flip-flop from one to the other. Electronic circuits come in two forms: Permanent Non-permanent ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
Input Devices Magnetic Technology Two parts to most of the magnetic forms of information storage: The  medium  that stores the magnetic information. Example: Floppy disk. Tiny spots on the disk are magnetized to represent 0s and 1s. The  device  that can “read” that information from the medium. The drive spins the disk. It has a magnetic sensing arm that moves over the disk. Performs nondestructive reading. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
Input Devices Optical Uses lasers to “read” the binary information from the medium, usually a disc. Millions of tiny holes are “burned” into the surface of the disc. The holes are interpreted as 1s. The absence of holes are interpreted as 0s. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
Input Devices Secondary Memory Input Devices These input devices are used by a computer to store information and then to retrieve that information as needed. External to the computer. Commonly consists of floppy disks, hard disk drives, or CD-ROMs. Secondary memory uses binary. The usual measurement is the byte. A byte consists of 8 binary digits (bits). The byte is a standard unit. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
Input Devices The four most important characteristics of storage devices: Speed and access time Cost / Removable versus non-removable Capacity Type of access ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
Input Devices Speed  (Access time) - How fast information can be taken from or stored onto the computer memory device’s medium. Electronic circuits: Fastest to access. 40 billionths of a second. Floppy disks: Very slow in comparison. Takes up to 1/2 second to reach full speed before access is even possible. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
Input Devices Cost Megabyte :  A Million bytes. Gigabyte :  A billion bytes. Two parts to a removable secondary storage device: The cost of the medium. ( Cheaper if bought in quantity) The cost of the drive. Examples:   Cost for drive Cost for medium  Floppy drive (1.4MB) 59.00 .50 Zip 100  (100 MB) 99.00 10.00 CD-WR  (650 MB) 360.00 and up 1.00 ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
Input Devices Capacity  - The amount of information that can be stored on the medium. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3- Unit Description Approximate Size 1 bit 1 binary digit 1 nibble 4 bits 1 byte 8 bits 1 character 1 kilobyte 1,024 bytes  1/2 page, double spaced 1 megabyte 1,048,576 bytes    500,000 pages 1 million bytes 1 gigabyte 1,073,741,824 bytes    5 million pages 1 billion bytes 1 terabyte 1 trillion bytes    5 billion pages
Input Devices Type of Access Sequential  - Obtained by proceeding through the storage medium  from the beginning until the designated area is reached (as in magnetic tape). Random Access  - Direct access (as in floppy and hard disks). ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
Primary Memory Primary storage  or  memory : Is where the data and program that are currently in operation or being accessed are stored during use.   Consists of electronic circuits:  Extremely fast and expensive. Two types:  RAM  (non-permanent)  Programs and data can be stored here for the computer’s use. Volatile: All information will be lost once the computer shuts down. ROM  (permanent) Contents do not change. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
The Central Processing Unit The Central Processing Unit ( CPU) Often referred to as the “brain” of the computer. Responsible for controlling all activities of the computer system. The three major components of the CPU are: 1.  Arithmetic Unit  (Computations performed) Accumulator (Results of computations kept here) 2.  Control Unit  (Has two locations where numbers are kept) Instruction Register  (Instruction placed here for analysis) Program Counter  (Which instruction will be performed next?) 3.  Instruction Decoding Unit  (Decodes the instruction) Motherboard : The place where most of the electronics including the CPU are mounted. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
Output Devices Output units store and display information (calculated results and other messages) for us to see and use. Floppy disk drives and Hard disk drives. Display monitors: Hi-resolution monitors come in two types: Cathode ray tube  (CRT) - Streams of electrons make phosphors glow on a large vacuum tube. Liquid crystal display  (LCD) - A flat panel display that uses crystals to let varying amounts of different colored light to pass through it.  Developed primarily for portable computers. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
Output Devices Audio Output Devices Windows machines need special audio card for audio output. Macintosh has audio playback built in. Audio output is useful for: Music CD player is a computer. Most personal computers have CD players that can access both music CDs and CD-ROMs. Voice synthesis (becoming more human sounding.) Multimedia Specialized tasks (i.e.: elevator’s floor announcements) ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
Output Devices Optical Disks: CD-ROM and DVD CD-ROM (Compact Disk - Read Only Memory) By its definition, CD-ROM is Read Only. Special CD drives “burn” information into blank CDs. Burn: A laser is used to “burn” craters into the surface to represent a binary 1. Two main types of CDs: CD-R (Compact Disk - Recordable) CD-WR (Compact Disk - ReWritable) It takes longer to write to a CD-R than a hard drive. Special software is needed to record. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
Output Devices DVD (Digital Versatile Disk) Allows up to 17 gigabytes of storage (from 4.7 GB to 17 GB). Compatible with older CD-ROM technology. The four versions of the DVD: ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
Output Devices Storage Requirements: How much storage capacity is needed for… One keystroke on a keyboard. 1 byte (8 bits) One page single-spaced document. 4.0 K Nineteen pages formatted text. 75 K One second of high-fidelity sound. 95-110 K Complete word processing program. 8.4 MG Storage Capacity: How much data can be stored on… One inch of 1/2 in. wide magnetic tape. 4 K One 3 1/2” floppy disk, high density. 1.4 MG One Compact Disk. 650 MG One DVD.  up to 17 GB ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
Moving Information Within the Computer How do binary numerals move into, out of, and within the computer? Information is moved about in bytes, or multiple bytes called words. Words  are the fundamental units of information. The number of bits per word may vary per computer. A word length for most large IBM computers is 32 bits: ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
Moving Information Within the Computer Bits that compose a word are passed in parallel from place to place. Ribbon cables :  Consist of several wires, molded together. One wire for each bit of the word or byte. Additional wires coordinate the activity of moving information. Each wire sends information in the form of a  voltage pulse. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
Moving Information Within the Computer Example of sending the word WOW over the ribbon cable Voltage pulses corresponding to the ASCII codes would pass through the cable. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
Packaging the Computer The many physical forms of the general purpose computer: All follow general organization: Primary memory Input units Output units Central Processing Unit Grouped according to speed, cost, size, and complexity. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3- Super Computers Mainframe Computers Minicomputers Microcomputer Palmtop Computer Calculator Fast  Expensive  Complex  Large Slow  Cheap  Simple  Small
Software Tools for Maintaining Your Computer Hardware Utility Programs  exist that can help diagnose and solve computer hardware problems. Four major problem areas where utility programs are helpful: Finding and fixing problems. Testing Input/Output peripherals. Testing RAM, motherboard, video cards. Recovering deleted files or fixing damaged disks. Improving computer performance. De-fragmenting a disk (Packs all files closer together). Preventative maintenance. Troubleshooting. Locates incompatible programs. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-

More Related Content

PPT
Ch3
munazarazzaq
 
PPT
Inside The Computer
Nasir Jumani
 
PPT
Pc components
Anoop George Muttath
 
PDF
Using of computer tech
Hardini_HD
 
PPTX
Ingles sena do
andreslopez741
 
PPTX
Ingles sena b
brayanroman10
 
PPTX
Cat info mgt
Isle of Man College
 
PPTX
Informatics practices project by sagar mandloi
sagar mandloi
 
Inside The Computer
Nasir Jumani
 
Pc components
Anoop George Muttath
 
Using of computer tech
Hardini_HD
 
Ingles sena do
andreslopez741
 
Ingles sena b
brayanroman10
 
Cat info mgt
Isle of Man College
 
Informatics practices project by sagar mandloi
sagar mandloi
 

What's hot (17)

PPTX
Introduction to programming concepts
hermiraguilar
 
ODP
Hardware presentation
lucasyjesus
 
DOCX
motherboard and storage devices
Cabdiraxmaan Jaamac
 
PDF
2 system-unit.ppt-compatibility-mode
EL Institute
 
PPTX
Input output ports and connectors
bhardwaj1992
 
PPTX
Ingles sena
AnaCristinaGallego
 
DOCX
Ig2 task 1
Kenyon101
 
PPT
04 connector and components
Ashik Iqbal
 
DOCX
Ig2 task 1 work sheet lewis brady copy
LewisB2013
 
PPT
Ports and Connectors
dipaknandankar
 
PPTX
The fundamentals of computer renew
Ram Pukar
 
DOCX
Ig2 task 1 work sheet
Jordanianmc
 
DOCX
ICT Basic Concepts
sandia1234
 
PPTX
input output ports
aslamslides
 
PPT
Cs100 lec 3 cont1 hardware - system unit and memory)
JhÜvs Laganson
 
Introduction to programming concepts
hermiraguilar
 
Hardware presentation
lucasyjesus
 
motherboard and storage devices
Cabdiraxmaan Jaamac
 
2 system-unit.ppt-compatibility-mode
EL Institute
 
Input output ports and connectors
bhardwaj1992
 
Ingles sena
AnaCristinaGallego
 
Ig2 task 1
Kenyon101
 
04 connector and components
Ashik Iqbal
 
Ig2 task 1 work sheet lewis brady copy
LewisB2013
 
Ports and Connectors
dipaknandankar
 
The fundamentals of computer renew
Ram Pukar
 
Ig2 task 1 work sheet
Jordanianmc
 
ICT Basic Concepts
sandia1234
 
input output ports
aslamslides
 
Cs100 lec 3 cont1 hardware - system unit and memory)
JhÜvs Laganson
 
Ad

Viewers also liked (20)

PPT
Olympics
Nadine Guevarra
 
PPTX
Wl lecture 2 essay 001
Nadine Guevarra
 
PPT
Robert frost 001
Nadine Guevarra
 
PPT
War and man’s past
Nadine Guevarra
 
PPT
Mother and child
Nadine Guevarra
 
PPT
Excel.01
Nadine Guevarra
 
DOC
Handout5 tables
Nadine Guevarra
 
PDF
Developing qualitative research design for mutually beneficial researcher f...
Joel Aitken
 
PPTX
On giving 001
Nadine Guevarra
 
PPT
Poetry 001
Nadine Guevarra
 
DOC
Handout6 html frames
Nadine Guevarra
 
PPT
Robert frost 001
Nadine Guevarra
 
DOC
Handout7 html forms
Nadine Guevarra
 
PPTX
Intro to spreadsheet
Nadine Guevarra
 
DOC
Handout1 intro to html
Nadine Guevarra
 
DOCX
Chapter 1
Nadine Guevarra
 
DOCX
Questionnaire
Nadine Guevarra
 
PPTX
The river merchant's wife 001
Nadine Guevarra
 
PPTX
Case study research
UNSW Canberra
 
PPTX
Phenomology
Sintayehu Daba
 
Olympics
Nadine Guevarra
 
Wl lecture 2 essay 001
Nadine Guevarra
 
Robert frost 001
Nadine Guevarra
 
War and man’s past
Nadine Guevarra
 
Mother and child
Nadine Guevarra
 
Excel.01
Nadine Guevarra
 
Handout5 tables
Nadine Guevarra
 
Developing qualitative research design for mutually beneficial researcher f...
Joel Aitken
 
On giving 001
Nadine Guevarra
 
Poetry 001
Nadine Guevarra
 
Handout6 html frames
Nadine Guevarra
 
Robert frost 001
Nadine Guevarra
 
Handout7 html forms
Nadine Guevarra
 
Intro to spreadsheet
Nadine Guevarra
 
Handout1 intro to html
Nadine Guevarra
 
Chapter 1
Nadine Guevarra
 
Questionnaire
Nadine Guevarra
 
The river merchant's wife 001
Nadine Guevarra
 
Case study research
UNSW Canberra
 
Phenomology
Sintayehu Daba
 
Ad

Similar to Lec no. 3 comp hardware components (20)

PPT
Ch3 storage devices
Radhika Jadhav
 
PPTX
Ch.01 introduction to_computers
Simmisar
 
PPT
Introduction to Computer
Notre Dame of Midsayap College
 
PPT
Intro to computer
Selva Raj Pillai
 
PDF
Ch.01 introduction to_computers
ejistcaloocan
 
PDF
Ch.01_Introduction_ to_computers.pdf
MewledMohammed
 
PDF
Ch.01_Introduction_ to_computers.pdf
saurabhChandbodhale
 
PPS
Power Point Lesson 02
Nasir Jumani
 
PDF
Chapter 1.pdf erre334444433443344444443r
TesterUser2
 
PPT
CT01 Computer Basics
ehillpamlico
 
PPT
Ipc 01
ajithsrc
 
PPT
Fundamentals Of Computer
Jack Frost
 
PPT
Introduction to Computer MBA SEM I - Copy (4).ppt
Gatjiekkuachlul
 
PPT
Introduction to Computer Networks for beginners
dayananda54
 
PPT
Introduction to Computer MBA SEM I - Copy (4).ppt
ChirsitanFenrnado
 
PPT
Introduction to Computer MBA SEM I - Copy (4).ppt
ashleshkumar3
 
PPT
Introduction to Computer MBA SEM I - Copy (4).ppt
csae99
 
PPT
Introduction to Computer MBA SEM I - Copy (4).ppt
alagark34
 
PPT
Introduction to Computer MBA SEM I - Copy (4).ppt
ROBERTLLUBHUNGIRA
 
Ch3 storage devices
Radhika Jadhav
 
Ch.01 introduction to_computers
Simmisar
 
Introduction to Computer
Notre Dame of Midsayap College
 
Intro to computer
Selva Raj Pillai
 
Ch.01 introduction to_computers
ejistcaloocan
 
Ch.01_Introduction_ to_computers.pdf
MewledMohammed
 
Ch.01_Introduction_ to_computers.pdf
saurabhChandbodhale
 
Power Point Lesson 02
Nasir Jumani
 
Chapter 1.pdf erre334444433443344444443r
TesterUser2
 
CT01 Computer Basics
ehillpamlico
 
Ipc 01
ajithsrc
 
Fundamentals Of Computer
Jack Frost
 
Introduction to Computer MBA SEM I - Copy (4).ppt
Gatjiekkuachlul
 
Introduction to Computer Networks for beginners
dayananda54
 
Introduction to Computer MBA SEM I - Copy (4).ppt
ChirsitanFenrnado
 
Introduction to Computer MBA SEM I - Copy (4).ppt
ashleshkumar3
 
Introduction to Computer MBA SEM I - Copy (4).ppt
csae99
 
Introduction to Computer MBA SEM I - Copy (4).ppt
alagark34
 
Introduction to Computer MBA SEM I - Copy (4).ppt
ROBERTLLUBHUNGIRA
 

Recently uploaded (20)

DOCX
Modul Ajar Deep Learning Bahasa Inggris Kelas 11 Terbaru 2025
wahyurestu63
 
PPTX
BASICS IN COMPUTER APPLICATIONS - UNIT I
suganthim28
 
PDF
The-Invisible-Living-World-Beyond-Our-Naked-Eye chapter 2.pdf/8th science cur...
Sandeep Swamy
 
PDF
Virat Kohli- the Pride of Indian cricket
kushpar147
 
PPTX
Measures_of_location_-_Averages_and__percentiles_by_DR SURYA K.pptx
Surya Ganesh
 
PPTX
Cleaning Validation Ppt Pharmaceutical validation
Ms. Ashatai Patil
 
PDF
2.Reshaping-Indias-Political-Map.ppt/pdf/8th class social science Exploring S...
Sandeep Swamy
 
PPTX
HISTORY COLLECTION FOR PSYCHIATRIC PATIENTS.pptx
PoojaSen20
 
PPTX
How to Apply for a Job From Odoo 18 Website
Celine George
 
PPTX
Artificial-Intelligence-in-Drug-Discovery by R D Jawarkar.pptx
Rahul Jawarkar
 
PPTX
family health care settings home visit - unit 6 - chn 1 - gnm 1st year.pptx
Priyanshu Anand
 
PPTX
An introduction to Dialogue writing.pptx
drsiddhantnagine
 
PPTX
Introduction to pediatric nursing in 5th Sem..pptx
AneetaSharma15
 
PPTX
Information Texts_Infographic on Forgetting Curve.pptx
Tata Sevilla
 
PPTX
Dakar Framework Education For All- 2000(Act)
santoshmohalik1
 
PPTX
Five Point Someone – Chetan Bhagat | Book Summary & Analysis by Bhupesh Kushwaha
Bhupesh Kushwaha
 
PDF
What is CFA?? Complete Guide to the Chartered Financial Analyst Program
sp4989653
 
PPTX
CARE OF UNCONSCIOUS PATIENTS .pptx
AneetaSharma15
 
PPTX
An introduction to Prepositions for beginners.pptx
drsiddhantnagine
 
PPTX
Applications of matrices In Real Life_20250724_091307_0000.pptx
gehlotkrish03
 
Modul Ajar Deep Learning Bahasa Inggris Kelas 11 Terbaru 2025
wahyurestu63
 
BASICS IN COMPUTER APPLICATIONS - UNIT I
suganthim28
 
The-Invisible-Living-World-Beyond-Our-Naked-Eye chapter 2.pdf/8th science cur...
Sandeep Swamy
 
Virat Kohli- the Pride of Indian cricket
kushpar147
 
Measures_of_location_-_Averages_and__percentiles_by_DR SURYA K.pptx
Surya Ganesh
 
Cleaning Validation Ppt Pharmaceutical validation
Ms. Ashatai Patil
 
2.Reshaping-Indias-Political-Map.ppt/pdf/8th class social science Exploring S...
Sandeep Swamy
 
HISTORY COLLECTION FOR PSYCHIATRIC PATIENTS.pptx
PoojaSen20
 
How to Apply for a Job From Odoo 18 Website
Celine George
 
Artificial-Intelligence-in-Drug-Discovery by R D Jawarkar.pptx
Rahul Jawarkar
 
family health care settings home visit - unit 6 - chn 1 - gnm 1st year.pptx
Priyanshu Anand
 
An introduction to Dialogue writing.pptx
drsiddhantnagine
 
Introduction to pediatric nursing in 5th Sem..pptx
AneetaSharma15
 
Information Texts_Infographic on Forgetting Curve.pptx
Tata Sevilla
 
Dakar Framework Education For All- 2000(Act)
santoshmohalik1
 
Five Point Someone – Chetan Bhagat | Book Summary & Analysis by Bhupesh Kushwaha
Bhupesh Kushwaha
 
What is CFA?? Complete Guide to the Chartered Financial Analyst Program
sp4989653
 
CARE OF UNCONSCIOUS PATIENTS .pptx
AneetaSharma15
 
An introduction to Prepositions for beginners.pptx
drsiddhantnagine
 
Applications of matrices In Real Life_20250724_091307_0000.pptx
gehlotkrish03
 

Lec no. 3 comp hardware components

  • 1. Lecture No. 3 Computer Hardware Components: CPU, Memory, and I/O By ROY FEROLINO, BSCS, MBA Lyceum of the Philippines University CAVITE
  • 2. Computer Hardware Components In this chapter: How did the computer become known as the stored-program computer? Do they all have the same characteristics? Memory on chips and memory on magnetic media, how do they differ? What do you look for when comparing memory devices? How is information moved around within the computer? How can you help your computer run better ? ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
  • 3. Basic Concepts of Computer Hardware This model of the typical digital computer is often called the von Neumann computer. Programs and data are stored in the same memory: primary memory. The computer can only perform one instruction at a time. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3- CPU (Central Processing Unit) Input Units Output Units Primary Memory
  • 4. Basic Concepts of Computer Hardware Input/Output (I/O): Refers to the process of getting information into and out of the computer. Input: Those parts of the computer receiving information to programs. Output: Those parts of the computer that provide results of computation to the person using the computer. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
  • 5. Sources of Data for the Computer Two types of data stored within a computer: Original data or information : Data being introduced to a computing system for the first time. Computers can deal directly with printed text, pictures, sound, and other common types of information. Previously stored data or information : Data that has already been processed by a computer and is being stored for later use. These are forms of binary data useful only to the computer. Examples: Floppy disks, DVD disks, and music CDs. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
  • 6. Input Devices Two categories of input hardware: Those that deal with original data. Those that handle previously stored data. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
  • 7. Input Devices Input hardware: Those that deal with original data. Keyboard Mouse Voice recognition hardware Scanner Digital camera Digitizing: The process of taking a visual image, or audio recording and converting it to a binary form for the computer. Used as data for programs to display, play or manipulate the digitized data. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
  • 8. Input Devices Connecting Hardware to the computer: Hardware needs access through some general input/output connection. Port : The pathway for data to go into and out of the computer from external devices such as keyboards. There are many standard ports as well as custom electronic ports designed for special purposes. Ports follow standards that define their use. SCSI, USB: Multiple peripheral devices (chain). RS-232, IDE: Individual peripheral devices. Peripheral device : A piece of hardware like a printer or disk drive, that is outside the main computer. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
  • 9. Input Devices Connecting Hardware to the computer: (continued) Hardware needs software on the computer that can service the device. Device driver : Software addition to the operating system that will allow the computer to communicate with a particular device. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
  • 10. Input Devices Common Basic Technologies for Storing Binary Information: Electronic Magnetic Optical ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
  • 11. Input Devices Electronic Circuits Most expensive of the three forms for storing binary information. A flip-flop circuit has either one electronic status or the other. It is said to flip-flop from one to the other. Electronic circuits come in two forms: Permanent Non-permanent ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
  • 12. Input Devices Magnetic Technology Two parts to most of the magnetic forms of information storage: The medium that stores the magnetic information. Example: Floppy disk. Tiny spots on the disk are magnetized to represent 0s and 1s. The device that can “read” that information from the medium. The drive spins the disk. It has a magnetic sensing arm that moves over the disk. Performs nondestructive reading. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
  • 13. Input Devices Optical Uses lasers to “read” the binary information from the medium, usually a disc. Millions of tiny holes are “burned” into the surface of the disc. The holes are interpreted as 1s. The absence of holes are interpreted as 0s. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
  • 14. Input Devices Secondary Memory Input Devices These input devices are used by a computer to store information and then to retrieve that information as needed. External to the computer. Commonly consists of floppy disks, hard disk drives, or CD-ROMs. Secondary memory uses binary. The usual measurement is the byte. A byte consists of 8 binary digits (bits). The byte is a standard unit. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
  • 15. Input Devices The four most important characteristics of storage devices: Speed and access time Cost / Removable versus non-removable Capacity Type of access ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
  • 16. Input Devices Speed (Access time) - How fast information can be taken from or stored onto the computer memory device’s medium. Electronic circuits: Fastest to access. 40 billionths of a second. Floppy disks: Very slow in comparison. Takes up to 1/2 second to reach full speed before access is even possible. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
  • 17. Input Devices Cost Megabyte : A Million bytes. Gigabyte : A billion bytes. Two parts to a removable secondary storage device: The cost of the medium. ( Cheaper if bought in quantity) The cost of the drive. Examples: Cost for drive Cost for medium Floppy drive (1.4MB) 59.00 .50 Zip 100 (100 MB) 99.00 10.00 CD-WR (650 MB) 360.00 and up 1.00 ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
  • 18. Input Devices Capacity - The amount of information that can be stored on the medium. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3- Unit Description Approximate Size 1 bit 1 binary digit 1 nibble 4 bits 1 byte 8 bits 1 character 1 kilobyte 1,024 bytes  1/2 page, double spaced 1 megabyte 1,048,576 bytes  500,000 pages 1 million bytes 1 gigabyte 1,073,741,824 bytes  5 million pages 1 billion bytes 1 terabyte 1 trillion bytes  5 billion pages
  • 19. Input Devices Type of Access Sequential - Obtained by proceeding through the storage medium from the beginning until the designated area is reached (as in magnetic tape). Random Access - Direct access (as in floppy and hard disks). ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
  • 20. Primary Memory Primary storage or memory : Is where the data and program that are currently in operation or being accessed are stored during use. Consists of electronic circuits: Extremely fast and expensive. Two types: RAM (non-permanent) Programs and data can be stored here for the computer’s use. Volatile: All information will be lost once the computer shuts down. ROM (permanent) Contents do not change. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
  • 21. The Central Processing Unit The Central Processing Unit ( CPU) Often referred to as the “brain” of the computer. Responsible for controlling all activities of the computer system. The three major components of the CPU are: 1. Arithmetic Unit (Computations performed) Accumulator (Results of computations kept here) 2. Control Unit (Has two locations where numbers are kept) Instruction Register (Instruction placed here for analysis) Program Counter (Which instruction will be performed next?) 3. Instruction Decoding Unit (Decodes the instruction) Motherboard : The place where most of the electronics including the CPU are mounted. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
  • 22. Output Devices Output units store and display information (calculated results and other messages) for us to see and use. Floppy disk drives and Hard disk drives. Display monitors: Hi-resolution monitors come in two types: Cathode ray tube (CRT) - Streams of electrons make phosphors glow on a large vacuum tube. Liquid crystal display (LCD) - A flat panel display that uses crystals to let varying amounts of different colored light to pass through it. Developed primarily for portable computers. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
  • 23. Output Devices Audio Output Devices Windows machines need special audio card for audio output. Macintosh has audio playback built in. Audio output is useful for: Music CD player is a computer. Most personal computers have CD players that can access both music CDs and CD-ROMs. Voice synthesis (becoming more human sounding.) Multimedia Specialized tasks (i.e.: elevator’s floor announcements) ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
  • 24. Output Devices Optical Disks: CD-ROM and DVD CD-ROM (Compact Disk - Read Only Memory) By its definition, CD-ROM is Read Only. Special CD drives “burn” information into blank CDs. Burn: A laser is used to “burn” craters into the surface to represent a binary 1. Two main types of CDs: CD-R (Compact Disk - Recordable) CD-WR (Compact Disk - ReWritable) It takes longer to write to a CD-R than a hard drive. Special software is needed to record. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
  • 25. Output Devices DVD (Digital Versatile Disk) Allows up to 17 gigabytes of storage (from 4.7 GB to 17 GB). Compatible with older CD-ROM technology. The four versions of the DVD: ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
  • 26. Output Devices Storage Requirements: How much storage capacity is needed for… One keystroke on a keyboard. 1 byte (8 bits) One page single-spaced document. 4.0 K Nineteen pages formatted text. 75 K One second of high-fidelity sound. 95-110 K Complete word processing program. 8.4 MG Storage Capacity: How much data can be stored on… One inch of 1/2 in. wide magnetic tape. 4 K One 3 1/2” floppy disk, high density. 1.4 MG One Compact Disk. 650 MG One DVD. up to 17 GB ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
  • 27. Moving Information Within the Computer How do binary numerals move into, out of, and within the computer? Information is moved about in bytes, or multiple bytes called words. Words are the fundamental units of information. The number of bits per word may vary per computer. A word length for most large IBM computers is 32 bits: ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
  • 28. Moving Information Within the Computer Bits that compose a word are passed in parallel from place to place. Ribbon cables : Consist of several wires, molded together. One wire for each bit of the word or byte. Additional wires coordinate the activity of moving information. Each wire sends information in the form of a voltage pulse. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
  • 29. Moving Information Within the Computer Example of sending the word WOW over the ribbon cable Voltage pulses corresponding to the ASCII codes would pass through the cable. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-
  • 30. Packaging the Computer The many physical forms of the general purpose computer: All follow general organization: Primary memory Input units Output units Central Processing Unit Grouped according to speed, cost, size, and complexity. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3- Super Computers Mainframe Computers Minicomputers Microcomputer Palmtop Computer Calculator Fast Expensive Complex Large Slow Cheap Simple Small
  • 31. Software Tools for Maintaining Your Computer Hardware Utility Programs exist that can help diagnose and solve computer hardware problems. Four major problem areas where utility programs are helpful: Finding and fixing problems. Testing Input/Output peripherals. Testing RAM, motherboard, video cards. Recovering deleted files or fixing damaged disks. Improving computer performance. De-fragmenting a disk (Packs all files closer together). Preventative maintenance. Troubleshooting. Locates incompatible programs. ROY ESPINELI FEROLINO, MBA 3-

Editor's Notes

  • #2: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #3: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #4: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #5: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #6: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #7: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #8: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #9: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #10: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #11: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #12: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #13: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #14: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #15: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #16: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #17: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #18: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #19: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #20: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #21: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #22: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #23: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #24: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #25: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #26: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #27: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #28: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #29: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #30: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #31: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum
  • #32: Chapter 3 The Computer Continuum