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Input and Output Devices

Input and Output Devices. Input Devices. Input devices are used to get data into a system. Examples of input devices are Keyboard Mouse Tracker Ball Touch sensitive pad Joystick Light pen. Keyboard. Types of keyboards: QWERTY Concept Braille. Point and Click devices.

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Input and Output Devices

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  1. Input and Output Devices

  2. Input Devices • Input devices are used to get data into a system. Examples of input devices are • Keyboard • Mouse • Tracker Ball • Touch sensitive pad • Joystick • Light pen

  3. Keyboard Types of keyboards: • QWERTY • Concept • Braille

  4. Point and Click devices • Point and Click devices include mouse, tracker balls, touch sensitive pads, joysticks, light pens.

  5. Mouse • The mouse translates movement on the desktop into digital information

  6. Tracker ball • The tracker ball is essentially an upside down mouse. • Instead of moving the mouse on the table top, the ball is rotated. • This achieves the same result as using a mouse but takes up far less room.

  7. Touch Pad • We usually find touch pad on notebook computers • A stylus or the user’s finger is pressed gently onto the pad, and as it is moved the cursor moves on the screen.

  8. Joystick • These are most commonly used to interact with computer games, although they are also used in other circumstances (e.g. on hospital scanners).

  9. Light Pen • Light pens are usually used with specialist design software. • The light pen works by being touched against the screen. • As the pen is moved on the screen, the cursor moves

  10. Readers • The most common types of reader used include magnetic strip readers, barcode readers, optical character readers/recognition, magnetic ink character readers/recognition, and optical mark readers/recognition.

  11. Magnetic strip readers • The most common magnetic tape readers are those used at electronic points of sale (EPOS). • These ‘read’ the personal data stored on the magnetic strip of a credit or debit card.

  12. Barcode Readers • Barcodes are used in shops, libraries, luggage handling, and stock control. • The lines on a barcode represent numbers, and can be scanned very quickly using a laser scanner.

  13. Optical character readers/recognition • Optical character recognition is a method of inputting text using a scanner. • It requires special software to convert the scanned image of each letter into an ASCII code

  14. Magnetic ink character readers/recognition • Magnetic ink characters are printed at the bottom of cheques. • They are used by banks to identify the bank a customer banks with, the individual branch where their account is held, and the customer’s bank account number

  15. Optical mark readers/recognition • Optical mark recognition sense marks made on specially designed forms (e.g. multiple choice answer sheets, lottery cards). • OMR is a very cheap, easy and quick to handle system of inputting data, but if a user makes a mistake they are difficult to correct.

  16. Punched cards • Punched cards and tape were used by the first computers to store programs and data. • They are seldom used today except for clock cards, which records when a person starts and ends work, and Kimball tags, which are used for stock control.

  17. Sound capture devices • The most common use of sound capture devices involves the use of voice recognition software and microphones. • Voice recognition software ‘remembers’ the way a user speaks, and converts their speech into text that appears on screen. • Although voice recognition software has become increasingly sophisticated, many such programs have difficulty converting more than 90% of common words accurately.

  18. Terminals • EPOS (Electronic Point Of Sale) and EFTPOS (Electronic Fund Transfer at Point Of Sale) terminals are connected, via secure Internet connections, to the computers of the main banks and credit card companies. • EPOS and EFTPOS allow a retailer to transfer the cost of what they have sold to a customer from the customer’s credit card or bank account to their own bank account. • This is much faster than accepting payment by cheque, and more secure than accepting payment in cash. • It also gives the retailer an opportunity to collect information about their customers, and to develop individual customer profiles (i.e. know what an individual customer may want to buy). • This helps to retailer to ‘target’ individual customers with special offers etc.

  19. Digital imaging devices • These include video digitisers, scanners, digital cameras, and web cams.

  20. Video Digitisers • The video digitiser is a combination of hardware and dedicated software that converts an analogue signal into a digital signal. • This is the basis of most set top boxes that give access to digital television on standard television sets. • It can also be used to ‘capture’ still images from video.

  21. Scanners • Scanners are used to scan text or images so that they can be stored on and manipulated by computer. • The scanner converts the text or image into a digital signal which it sends to the computer. • The user can then decide whether they want to store or manipulate what they have scanned.

  22. Digital cameras • Digital cameras convert the analogue image seen through the camera’s lenses into a digital signal that can be stored. • Each picture is split up into millions of tiny squares (or pixels), each of which is a different colour. • Each pixel is stored as a ‘bit’ of digital information.

  23. Web cams • Web cameras are small digital cameras which are attached to computers so that still and motion digital images can be ‘captured’ and used. • They are often used in conjunction with the Internet so that people can videoconference.

  24. Output devices • Output devices are used to get data out of a system.

  25. Visual devices • The most common visual device is the visual display unit (VDU). • These are also known as computer screens and monitors. • The types of visual display unit found in common usage are based on cathode ray tube (CRT) or liquid crystal display (LCD) technology.

  26. CRT

  27. LCD • A simple black - or - white LCD display works by either allowing daylight to be reflected back out at the viewer or preventing it from doing so - in which case the viewer sees a black area. The liquid crystal is the part of the system that either prevents light from passing through it or not. The crystal is placed between two polarising filters that are at right angles to each other and together block light. When there is no electric current applied to the crystal, it twists light by 90o, which allows the light to pass through the second polariser and be reflected back. But when the voltage is applied, the crystal molecules align themselves, and light cannot pass through the polariser: the segment turns black.Selective application of voltage to electrode segments creates the digits we see.

  28. Printers The three main categories of printers are: • Laser printers • Ink-jet printers • Dot-matrix printers

  29. Laser printers • A laser printer is a common type of computer printer that rapidly produces high quality text and graphics on plain paper. As with digital photocopiers, laser printers employ a xerographic printing process but differ from analog photocopiers in that the image is produced by the direct scanning of a laser beam across the printer's photoreceptor.

  30. Laser Printer

  31. Ink-jet • Inkjet printers operate by propelling variably-sized droplets of liquid ink onto almost any sized page. They are the most common type of computer printer for the general consumer due to their low cost, high quality of output, capability of printing in vivid colour, and ease of use.

  32. Ink-jet

  33. Dot - Matrix • A dot matrix printer or impact matrix printer refers to a type of computer printer with a print head that runs back and forth on the page and prints by impact, striking an ink-soaked cloth ribbon against the paper, much like a typewriter. • Dot matrix printers, like any impact printer, can print on multi-part stationery or make carbon-copies. Impact printers have one of the lowest printing costs per page. As the ink is running out, the printout gradually fades rather than suddenly stopping partway through a job. They are able to use continuous paper rather than requiring individual sheets, making them useful for data logging. They are good, reliable workhorses ideal for use in situations where printed content is more important than quality.

  34. Dot matrix

  35. Plotter • There are two types of main plotters. Those are pen plotters and electrostatic plotters. • Plotters are used primarily in technical drawing and CAD applications, where they have the advantage of working on very large paper sizes while maintaining high resolution. Another use has been found by replacing the pen with a cutter, and in this form plotters can be found in many garment and sign shops.

  36. Plotters

  37. Computer controlled devices • A variety of different control devices can be connected to a computer. • These include robotic arms and motors (also known as actuators). • The most common use of computer controlled devices is in computer-aided manufacturing.

  38. Input-Output Devices • Touch Screen • Modem

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