Basic Hardware Components of a Computer At the desktop · • The instructions that tell hardware...

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Hardware

Session 2

CSC200 Survey of Computing

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

A computer's capabilities and

versatility are built upon its:

• Hardware: • The physical part

• Software: • The instructions that tell hardware how to transform

the input data into the necessary output

• Connections: • Its ability to communicate with other computers

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Basic Hardware Components of a Computer

• Input devices

• Central Processing Unit (CPU)

• Memory

• Storage devices

• Output devices

At the desktop

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

CPU and Memory

• CPU communicates with all the other parts of the computer system indirectly through memory

• Housed along with other chips and electronic components on the motherboard

• (pg 50 of TT)

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

CPU (Central Processing Unit)

• Interprets and executes the instructions in each program

• Supervises arithmetic and logical data manipulations

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Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Memory RAM

(random access memory)

• Used to store program instructions and data temporarily

• Unique addresses and data can be stored in any location

• Can quickly retrieve information

• Will not remain if power goes off (volatile)

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Memory

ROM (read-only memory)

• Information is stored permanently on a chip

• Contains startup instructions and other permanent data

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Buses

Information travels between components on the motherboard through groups of wires called system buses, or just buses

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Factors that Impact CPU Performance

•Its internal clock speed

• Measured in units called gigahertz (GHz)billions of clock cycles per second

•The architecture and word size of the processor

•Word size

• Number of bytes that a CPU can process at one time

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

A Computer Truism

• A computer system’s throughput speed

can be no faster than its slowest

component.

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Computer Families

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Supercomputers

For those who need access to the fastest, most

powerful computers made.

Many scientific and research applications.

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Mainframes

Used by large organizations, such as banks and airlines, for big computing

jobs

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Servers

Computers designed to provide software and

other resources to other computers over a

network

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Workstations

High-end desktop computers with massive

computing power

used for high-end interactive applications like

Computer-Aided Design – Computer-Aided

Manufacturing (CAD-CAM).

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

PCs and Macs

Serve a single user at a time

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Portable Computers

Machines that are not tied to the desktop

• Notebooks (laptops)

• Handheld computers (PDAs)

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Embedded Computers

Special-purpose computers that perform

specific tasks, e.g.

• Sensing your toast is done

• Monitoring your heart rate

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Storage Devices/Media

Data Repositories

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

• Magnetic

• Optical

• Solid-state

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Storage - Magnetic Disks

• Random Access

• Hard Drive

• Non-removable, rigid disks that spin continuously and rapidly

• Floppy disks

• Provide inexpensive, portable storage

• Removable media (Zip & Jaz disks) • Provide high-capacity portable

storage

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Storage – Magnetic Tape

• Sequential data access – major limitation

• Can store large amounts of information in a small

space at a relatively low cost

• Used mainly for backup purposes

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Storage – Optical Disks

Use laser beams to read and write bits of information

on the disk surface

• Not as fast as magnetic hard disks

• Massive storage capacity

• Very reliable

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Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Optical Disks - CDs• CD-ROM

• Optical drives that read CD-ROMs

• CD-R

• WORM media (write-once, read many)

• CD-RW

• Can read CD-ROMs and write, erase and

• rewrite data onto CD-R & CD-RW disks

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Optical Disks - DVDs

• DVD (Digital Versatile (or Video) Disks)• Store & distribute all kinds of data• Hold between 3.8 and 17 gigabytes of

information

• DVD-ROM drives

• Can play DVD movies, read DVD data disks, read

• standard CD-ROMs, and play audio CDs• Because they’re read-only, they can’t record

data, music, or movies

• DVD-RAM drives • Can read, erase, and write data (but not DVD

video) on multi-gigabyte

• DVD-R (but not CD-R or CD-RW) media

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Storage –Solid-State Storage Devices

Contains an erasable memory chip

• Sizes range from 16 MB to 8 GB+ for flash drives

• Compact alternative to disk storage

• Contains no moving parts

• replacing disk and tape storage

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Peripherals

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Digital

Peripherals perform the translations

AnalogAnalogAnalogAnalog

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Peripherals

• Input devices

• Output devices

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Input Devices

• Text entry

• Pointing

• Scanning

• Digitizing

• Sensing

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Input Devices - Text

Keyboard

• The most familiar input device

• Used to enter letters, numbers and special characters

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Keyboards• Standard keyboard • Ergonomic keyboards

• To address possible medical problems • Wireless keyboard• Folding keyboards

• Used with palm-sized computers• One-handed keyboards• Membrane keyboards

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Input Devices - Pointing

• Mouse • Touchpad • Pointing stick • Trackball • Joystick • Graphics tablet • Touch screen

With Stylus

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Input Devices – Scanning

• Reads marks representing codes specifically

designed for computer input

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Input Devices - Digitizing

• Scanner• Tablet PC • Smart whiteboard

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Input Devices - Digitizing

• Digital camera• Snapshots captured as digital images

• Digital images stored as bit patterns on disks or other digital storage media

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Input Devices - Digitizing

• Video digitizer

• Capture input from a:

• Video camera

• Video cassette recorder or television

• Convert it to a digital signal

• Videoconferencing

• People in diverse locations can see and hear each other

• Used to conduct long-distance meetings

• Video images transmitted through networks

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Input Devices - Digitizing

• Microphone

• Audio digitizers

• Digitize sounds from

• Microphones

• Other input devices

• Digital signals can be

• Stored

• Further processed with

specialized software

• A digital signal

processing chip compresses the stream

of bits before it is transmitted to the CPU

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Input Devices - Sensing

• Sensors • Designed to monitor physical

conditions

• Temperature, humidity, pressure

• Provide data used in:

• Robotics

• Environmental climate control

• Weather forecasting

• Medical monitoring

• Biofeedback

• Scientific research

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Sensing - The EyegazeTM

system

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Output Devices

For human senses

– Vision

– Hearing - Sound

– Haptic – Touch

Other devices

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Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Output Devices – Visual

• Monitor classes

• CRTs (cathode-ray tubes)

• LCDs (liquid crystal displays) are now more

popular

• Portable computers

• Projection

• Overhead projection panels

• Video projectors

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Output Devices – Monitors

• A monitor or video display terminal (VDT) displays characters, graphics, photographic images, animation and video

• Video adapter—connects the monitor to the computer

• VRAM or video memory—a special portion of RAM to hold video images • the more video memory, the more picture detail is

displayed

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Output Devices – Monitors

Monitor size:

• Measured as a diagonal line across the screen

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Output Devices – Monitors

• Image quality is affected by resolution and color depth (or bit depth)

• Resolution: The number of pixels displayed on the screen

Pixels (or picture elements): tiny dots that compose a picture

The higher the resolution, the closer together the dots

• Color depth: refers to the number of different colors a

monitor displays at one time

Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Color depth - Examples

1-bit depth

16-bit depth8-bit depth

4-bit depth

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Screen Resolution and Color Depth- Do try this at home

• Open a document on your computer

• Change the resolution of your monitor (via Control Panel)

• View the document again – how did it change

• Change the color depth,

• How did that impact what you view ?

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Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Output - Paper

• Printers (vision)

• Plotters (vision)

• Embossers (haptic)

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Output Devices - Printers

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Plotter

can produce large, finely scaled engineering blueprints and maps

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Embosser

Creates Braille output

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Haptic - Refreshable Braille display

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Sound Production

• Speakers

• Headphones

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Copyright M J Davidson 2008

Controlling Other Machines

Output devices take bit patterns and turn them into non-digital movements

• Robot arms

• Telephone switchboards• Transportation devices• Automated factory equipment

• Spacecraft• Force feedback joystick