Title: Multimedia Devices and Mass Storage
1Chapter 9
- Multimedia Devices and Mass Storage
2You Will Learn
- How multimedia works on a PC
- About multimedia devices such as sound cards,
digital cameras, and MP3 players - About optical storage technologies such as CD and
DVD - How certain hardware devices are used for backups
and fault tolerance
continued
3You Will Learn
- How to install multimedia and mass storage
components - How to troubleshoot multimedia and mass storage
components
4Multimedia on a PC
- Goal
- To create or reproduce lifelike representations
of sight and sound - Challenge
- Data storage is digital
- Sights and sounds are analog
5CPU Technologies for Multimedia
- MMX, SSE, and 3DNow!
- Improve speed of processing graphics, video, and
sound - Use improved methods of handling high-volume
repetition during I/O operations - Software must be written to use the specific
capabilities
6Multimedia Devices
- Sound cards
- Record sound, save it to a file on hard drive,
play it back - Externally attached devices
- Digital cameras
- MP3 players
7Sound Cards
- Stages of computerized sound
- Digitize or input sound (sampling)
- Store digital data in compressed data file
- Reproduce or synthesize sound (digital to analog)
8Sound Card Manufacturers
9Installing a Sound Card
- Physical installation of the card
- Installation of sound card driver
- Installation of sound applications software
10(No Transcript)
11Installing a Sound Card
12Digital Cameras
- Use light sensors to detect light and convert it
to a digital signal stored in an image file using
JPEG format - TWAIN
- Standard format used by digital cameras and
scanners for transferring images
13A Flash RAM Card
14Digital Camera Manufacturers
15MP3 Player
- A device that plays MP3 files (a version of MPEG
compression) - Compression methods used with MP3 players
- How MP3 players work
- Play MP3 files downloaded from a PC, using
internal memory and flash storage devices
16MP3 Player Manufacturers
17Video Capture Card
- Captures input from a camcorder or directly from
TV - Features to look for
- IEEE 1394 (FireWire) port
- Data transfer rates
- Capture resolution and color-depth capabilities
- Ability to transfer data back to digital
camcorder or VCR - Stereo audio jacks
- Video-editing software
18Video Capture Card Manufacturers
19Optical Storage Technology
- Patterns of tiny pits on disc surface represent
bits, which are readable by a laser beam - Major optical storage technologies
- CD-ROM
- CD-R and CD-RW
- DVD
20CD-ROM
- Read-only data physically embedded into disc
surface - Combines constant linear velocity (CLV) and
constant angular velocity (CAV)
21CD-ROM Drive Manufacturers
22CD-ROMs
- Caring for CD-ROM drives and discs
- Data written only to bottom of CD-ROM
- Use precautions when handling
- CD-ROM drive interface with motherboard
- IDE interface (most common)
- SCSI interface
- Proprietary expansion card
- Proprietary connection on sound card
- Portable drive plug into external port on PC
23Installing a CD-ROM Drive
24CD-R and CD-RW
- CD-R (CD-recordable)
- Enables burning your own CDs
- Cannot edit or overwrite
- CD-RW (CD-rewritable)
- Allows overwriting old data with new data
25DVD (Digital Video Disc)
- Storage capacity
- 8.5 GB (one side)
- 17 GB (both sides)
- Uses Universal Disk Format (UDF) file system
- Uses accompanying decoder card to decode
MPEG-compressed video data and Dolby AC-3
compressed audio
26DVD
27DVD Devices
28DVD Drive Manufacturers
29Installing a DVD Drive
30(No Transcript)
31(No Transcript)
32Installing a DVD Drive
33Installing a DVD Drive
34Installing a DVD Drive
35Installing a DVD Drive
36Installing a DVD Drive
37Hardware Used for Backups and Fault Tolerance
- Standalone PCs or small servers
- Tape, Zip, and Jaz drives
- Read-write CDs
- Business environment with PC connected to file
server - Back up data to file server
38Tape Drives
- Advantages
- Inexpensive and convenient
- Large capacity
- Several types and formats
- Disadvantage
- Sequential access
39Tape Drive Manufacturers
40How a Tape Drive Interfaces With a Computer
- External
- Parallel port
- Internal
- IDE ATAPI interface
- External or internal
- SCSI bus
- Proprietary controller card or floppy drive
interface
41External Drive UsingParallel Port
42Internal Drive UsingATAPI IDE Tape Drive
43Tapes Used by a Tape Drive
- Full-sized data cartridges
- Minicartridges
44Tape Drive Standards
45Tape Formats and Tape Types
- Quarter-Inch Committee (QIC) or quarter-inch
cartridge standards
46Removable Drives
- Increase overall storage capacity of a system
- Easy to move large files from one computer to
another - Convenient medium for making backups of hard
drive data - Easy to secure important files
47Types of Removable Drives
48Removable Drives
- Considerations
- Drop height
- Half-life
- Installing a removable drive
49RAID (Redundant Array of Independent Disks)
- Improves performance and/or automatically
recovers from a failure - Mirrors data stored on a hard disk
- Increases hard drive capacity by making more than
one hard drive work as a single virtual drive
50Common RAID Levels
51RAID 4
52Windows Support for RAID
53Troubleshooting Guidelines
- Do not touch chips on circuit boards or disk
surfaces where data is stored - Do not stack components on top of one another
- Do not subject them to magnetic fields or ESD
54Problems with CD-ROM orDVD Installation
- Computer does not recognize the drive (no drive D
listed in Windows 9x Explorer)
55Troubleshooting Sound Problems
- Problem with sound card itself
- Result of system settings
- Bad connections
56Troubleshooting Tape Drives
- A minicartridge does not work
- Data transfer is slow
- Drive does not work after installation
- Drive fails intermittently or gives errors
57Chapter Summary
- Multimedia devices
- What they can do
- How they work
- How to support them
- Storage devices installation and troubleshooting
- CD
- DVD
- Removable drives
- Tape drives