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Technology In Action. Te chnology In Action. Chapter 2 Looking at Computers: Understanding the Parts. Chapter Topics. Hardware components Input devices Output devices System unit Ergonomics. A Computer Is….
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Technology In Action Chapter 2Looking at Computers: Understanding the Parts
Chapter Topics • Hardware components • Input devices • Output devices • System unit • Ergonomics
A Computer Is… • A device that accepts input, processes data, stores data, and produces output
A Computer Is… • A collection of hardware and software assembled for a certain purpose • The physical parts of a computer are collectively known as hardware. • The programs or instructions used to tell the computer hardware what to do are software.
A Computer Is… • Computers can store both data and instructions in memory. • Von Neumannarchitecture • A program is a set of hardware instructions which are loaded into memory • Storing multiple programs in memory allows you to switch between tasks • This ability distinguishes a computer from other simpler devices
Hardware System Unit System Unit Peripheral Devices Peripheral Devices
Input Devices • Devices used to enter information or instructions into the computer • Keyboard • Mouse / pointing device • Microphone • Scanner • Digital camera • Devices that are touched need to be cleaned regularly Scanner
Keyboard • The QWERTY keyboard is standard on most PCs • Enhanced features include number pad, function and navigation keys.
Dvorak Keyboard • Puts the most commonly used keys at “home keys” • Reduces distance of finger stretches
Specialty Keyboards • Laptops • PDAs • Wireless • Ergonomic Laptop PDA Ergonomic
Mouse • Rollerball mouse • Less expensive • Harder to keep clean • Optical mouse • Needs no mouse pad • Doesn’t need as much cleaning • More expensive • Trackball • Less movement of the wrist • Stationary on desk • Wireless mouse • can be either roller or optical • security issues Standard Wireless Trackball Optical
Inputting Sound Microphone Input Teleconferencing Voice over Internet Voice Recognition Microsoft Voice Recognition
Input for the Physically Challenged • Visually Impaired • Voice recognition • Keyboards with large keys • On-screen keyboards • Motor control • Special trackballs • Head-mounted devices
Other Input Devices Handheld • Scanners • Text (OCR) • Images • Bar codes • RFID tags • Digital cameras • Images • Video Flatbed Camera Camcorder
Output Devices • Retrieving information from the computer's memory for human use • Output devices • Softcopy (video, sounds, control signals) • Hardcopy (print)
CRT Cathode Ray Tube Less expensive Use much more space Uses more energy Better viewing angles LCD Liquid Crystal Display More expensive Uses far less space More energy efficient Less viewable from an angle Monitor Types
CRT Monitors • Uses picture tube (TV) technology • Screen size – Diagonal measurement of the screen (15, 17, 19, 21 inches) • Resolution – Sharpness of the image = the number of pixels that the screen can display (800 x 600, 1024 x 768, 1600 x 1200) • Refresh rate – Speed at which the screen is refreshed (75Hz, 85Hz) Faster rate equals less flicker. • Dot pitch - distance between pixels measured in mm (0.28, 0.32 mm) smaller is better
Liquid Crystal Display • Liquid crystal sandwiched between two transparent layers form images • Used for notebook computers, PDAs, cellular phones, and personal computers Polarizer Color filter Color filter glass Liquid Crystal Glass polarizer Backlight
CRTs have wider viewing angles better color accuracy cheaper than LCDs slightly faster display Radiation a danger? LCDs are smaller and lighter take less power and give off less radiation have a larger viewable area CRTs vs. LCDs
Other Video Output • Touch-screen monitors double as both input and output devices. • Data projectors project a computer image to a large screen for sharing with large groups.
Printers • Impact printers • Dot-matrix • Nonimpact printers • Inkjet • Laser • Multifunction • Specialty printers • Plotters • Thermal printers Inkjet Dot-matrix Laser Multifunction Plotter Thermalprinter
Inkjet Less expensive device Full color printing Slower in pages per minute (PPM) More expensive per page in B&W Laser More expensive device Black and White (Color lasers are very expensive - CYMK) Faster in PPM Less expensive in B&W Nonimpact Printers
Comparing Printers • Speed - ppm • Resolution - dpi • Color / BW • Memory - MB • Cost of device • Cost per page - ink or toner
Outputting Sound • Voice synthesis • Stephen Hawking
Outputting Sound • Speakers and Headphones
The System Unit Box that contains the central electronic components of the computer: • CPU/RAM/motherboard • Expansion cards • Power supply • Storage devices
The Front Panel • Drive bays • Memory card reader • Floppy drive • Productivity ports • Power button
The Back • Ports for peripheral devices • Types of ports: • Serial • Parallel • VGA • USB • Connectivity
Inside the System Unit • Essential electronic components used to process data • Types of components: • Power supply • Secondary storage • Motherboard • CPU • Expansion cards
The Motherboard • CPU (chips) • RAM • Expansion cards
Expansion Cards • Adds functions • Provides new connections for peripheral devices • Common types: • Sound • Modem • Video (VGA) • Network (NIC)
Secondary StorageHard Disk Drive • Stores data and program instructions • Permanent (nonvolatile) storage • Storage capacities up to 250 GB and higher • Transfers data in milliseconds (slower than RAM!)
Setting it all up: Ergonomics • Ergonomics refers to designing devices so they are comfortable and efficient to use • Steps to follow: • Position monitor correctly • Use adjustable chair • Assume proper position while typing (RSI) • Take breaks • Ensure adequate lighting
The Digital Divide • The Digital Divide is a social/political issue referring to the gap between people who have access to computers and the Internet and those who do not. • Issues effecting this divide include age, economics, geographic location, etc… • Attempted solutions - making computers available at public libraries, "One Laptop Per Child"
GIGO • GIGO stands for “Garbage In, Garbage Out” • If invalid data is entered in a computer program, the resulting output will also be invalid. • If a computer asked you to enter a letter and you enter a number, the results you would get back would probably be messed up, or "garbage."