Title: Hardware: Input, Processing, and Output Devices
1Chapter 3
- Hardware Input, Processing, and Output Devices
Most information in this presentation has been
copied from the Dell.com web site
2Agenda
- Computer System
- How to buy a computer
- Other Computer System Hardware
3What is a Computer System?
- A computer system is a special subsystem of an
organizations overall information system used to
input, process, store and output data and
information. - Putting together a complete computer system is
more than just connecting computer devices.
Components must be selected and organized with an
understanding of the tradeoff between overall
system effectiveness and efficiency, and
considerations of cost, control and complexity. - When selecting computer system devices, it is
necessary to consider the current and future
needs of the overall information system.
4Computer System Hardware Components
- Computer system hardware components include
devices that perform the functions of input,
processing, communication, data storage and
output of an information system.
5Part I How to Buy a Computer
Most information in this presentation has been
copied from the Dell.com web site
6DimensionTMÂ XPS Gen 4 NEW! Extreme Performance
with Expandability
- The most advanced Dimension ever built _at_ 5,573
(configured system) - Pentium 4 Processor w/ HT Tech Extreme Edition
(3.40GHz, 800 FSB) - 4GB Dual Channel DDR2 SDRAM at 533MHz (4x1GB)
- 400GB Serial ATA Hard Drive (7200RPM)
- 256MB PCI Express x16 (DVI/VGA/TV-out) ATI
Radeon X850 XT PE - 20 inch Ultrasharp 2001FP Digital Flat Panel
- Dual Drives 48x CD-RW Drive 16x DVD/-RW w/
double layer write capable - 1GB Compact Flash Card
- Dell Wireless Keyboard and Optical Mouse
- Dell 5650 5.1 Surround Sound Speaker System with
Subwoofer - IEEE 1394 Adapter
- 56K PCI Telephony Modem
7Pentium 4 Processor w/ HT Tech Extreme Edition
(3.40GHz, 800 FSB)
- The processor is the brain of a computer. It is
also called the central processing unit (CPU). It
interprets and executes instructions of computer
programs or the operating system. In terms of
computing power, the CPU is the most important
element of a computer system. The combination of
processor clock speed, architecture, cache, and
front side bus decides the performance of a
processor. - Clock Speed Speed of the processor's internal
clock which dictates how fast the processor can
process the data. Clock speed is usually measured
in GHz (gigahertz, or billions of pulses per
second). - Architecture Basic design of a microprocessor.
It may include processor technology and/or other
architectural enhancements. - Cache A temporary storage for frequently
accessed or recently accessed data. Having
certain data stored in a cache speeds up the
operation of the computer. Cache size is measured
in megabytes (MB) or kilobytes (KB). Level 1
Cache is a small, fast memory cache that is built
in to the main chip and helps speed access to
important and frequently-used data. Level 2 Cache
is a collection of built-in memory chips, slower
than the Level 1 Cache but faster than the main
memory area. Level 2 (L2) Cache can help speed
the operation of some applications. - Front Side Bus The connecting path between the
processor and other key components such as the
memory controller hub. FSB speed is measured in
GHz or MHz.
84GB Dual Channel DDR2 SDRAM at 533MHz (4x1GB)
- Random Access Memory (RAM) is the workhorse
behind the performance of the computer. RAM
temporarily stores information from the operating
system, applications, and data in current use.
This gives the processor easy access to the
critical information that makes the programs run.
The amount of RAM determines how many programs
can be executed at one time and how much data can
be readily available to a program. It also
determines how quickly the applications perform
and how many applications can easily be toggled
between at one time. Simply put, the more RAM the
computer has, the more programs can be run
smoothly and simultaneously. Upgrading your
memory is truly one of the most cost-effective
way to boost the system performance. - Tests show that increasing memory from 128MB to
256MB increases system performance up to 37.
Increasing memory from 128MB to 512MB improves
system performance up to 50. - DDR SDRAM Double Data Rate Synchronous Dynamic
Random Access Memory is memory that provides
higher bandwidth than ordinary SDRAM memory. - Frequency The number of repetitions in a signal
or waveform, measured in Mega-Hertz (MHz). A
higher frequency improves system performance and
speed. - Dual Channel Memory technology that delivers
twice the peak bandwidth of the single channel
memory.
9400GB Serial ATA Hard Drive (7200RPM)
- The hard drive is the primary storage unit of the
computer. It is where the operating system,
applications, files and data are kept. - RAID hard drive combines multiple hard drives
into one disk to achieve the performance and
security. RAID 0 (data striping) for maximum
performance or RAID 1 (data mirroring) for data
security. The video editor often utilizes RAID 0.
User with the data integrity concern, often
utilizes RAID 1. With RAID 0 all capacity on both
hard drives is usable. With RAID 1 only half the
capacity is usable and the other half is devoted
to back-up. - Storage Capacity Why buy a higher capacity hard
drive? - Higher capacity drives can store larger
amount of data. It is necessary to buy a larger
size hard drive or RAID in order to store digital
video, audio file storage or to work with
intense applications. - Rotational Speed Why Buy a Higher RPM Drive? -
Rotational speed is a major factor in hard drive
selection as it determines how quickly data can
be retrieved. Typical rotational speeds are 5400
RPM or 7200 RPM for desktops, and 4200 RPM or
5400 RPM for notebooks. The higher the RPM
(revolutions per minute), the less time is
required for the computer to access the file. - Interface (Parallel or Serial) Is interface
important? - The interface is the link between
the hard drive and the computer used to transfer
data. It is important because it regulates the
speed of data throughput from the system to the
hard drive. The new SATA (Serial Advanced
Technology Attachment) is the evolutionary
follow-on to IDE. SATA is capable of higher data
throughput than the UATA-100 interface.
10256MB PCI Express x16 (DVI/VGA/TV-out) ATI
Radeon X850 XT PE
- A video card is the part of the computer that
transforms video data into the visual display you
see on the monitor. The video card plugs into the
computer's motherboard, and is responsible for
decoding and processing the video signal. The
quality of video on the monitor depends on both
the video card and the monitor. More video card
memory and faster graphics processors can result
in more stunning and enjoyable visual effects
when running games and programs with detailed
graphic design. - Memory Video card has their own memory, which is
reserved for storing graphical images. Video
memory on a video card frees the computer's RAM,
so the computer's memory does not have to store
graphics. Video memory is available in standard
sizes 32MB, 64MB, 128MB, etc. Typically, a card
with a higher memory capacity will be capable of
more advanced rendering and support for 2-D and
3-D graphics. It is better to have at least 128MB
video memory for performing the tasks of
presentation, desktop publishing, gaming, or
video editing.Processor In addition to memory,
video card has its own graphics processor for
creating images. A graphics processor is
specially designed for computing graphical
transformations, and achieving faster graphics
results than the general-purpose CPU used by the
computer. An integrated graphics solution uses
the CPU of your computer to create graphics that
is slower than a video card with its own
processor since it takes thousands of calculation
to produce even basic images on the monitor. The
video card processor is also known as the
controller or graphics engine. - PCI Express PCI Express (PCIe) is the latest
interface specification designed to improve a
system's graphic performance by increasing its
bandwidth. It helps speed the communication flow
between the CPU and the graphics controller. This
enhancement allows texture maps with greater
size, detail, and realism. It also enables 3D
applications to run faster because of even higher
bandwidth compared to AGP.
1120 inch Ultrasharp 2001FP Digital Flat Panel
- Size The monitor is measured in inches and refer
to the diagonal length from one corner of the
monitor box to the other. The actual viewable
area (or screen measurement) is the measurement
in parentheses and labeled as VIS (viewable image
size). The monitor is usually listed as 17-in
(16.0 viewable). This is very important when
comparing flat panels to CRT's. A flat panel
usually has the same VIS as its size category a
17" flat panel has a 17.0" VIS. However a 17" CRT
may have a 16.0" VIS or less as the width of the
CRT bezel ? is included in the monitor size
measurement. Also keep in mind that the most
conventional CRT monitors are as deep as they are
wide. Purchasing a flat panel display is more
suitable for the limited space environment. - Flat panel quality is determined by resolution.
Resolution refers to the number of individual
pixels contained on a display. The higher the
resolution, the more pixels can fit onto the
screen and so the sharper and more detailed
images can be displayed. The resolution together
with contrast ratio, brightness, and viewing
angle determine the overall quality of a flat
panel. - CRT quality is measured in dot pitch or strip
pitch. Dot pitch is the measure of space between
a display's pixels the smaller the pitch, the
sharper the images. A measurement of .27mm is
average for dot pitch. The monitor's viewable
area, refresh rate and dot pitch all directly
affect the display quality of a monitor. - Active Matrix TFT LCD technology displays sharp,
brilliant images with resolution ranging from
1024 x 768 to 1600 x 1200 pixels, depending on
the display model. - A wide viewing angle allows viewing from various
angles without compromising image quality for the
viewing flexibility or the multiple user viewing. - Digital DVI functionality provides seamless
digital connection, helping to maintain image
integrity. ?
12Dual Drives 48x CD-RW Drive 16x DVD/-RW w/
double layer write capable
- The DVD/-RW Burner is an all-in-one drive to
read or burn DVDR, DVD-R, DVDRW, DVD-RW, CD-R
and CD-RW discs, as well as read CD-ROM and
DVD-ROM. - What is Double Layer? The combination of a double
layer DVD/-RW drive and double layer capable
media support writing up to 8.5GB of data or
video to a double layer DVDR or DVD-R. - 16x is a measurement of CD or DVD drive speed.
Each x translates to either 153,600 bytes of data
per second for the data rate of the CD-audio or
1,250,000 bytes per second for the data rate of
the DVD-video. ? - What is a CD-RW? A CD-RW will allow an user to
create custom music CDs and data CDs for data
back-up or data transfer purposes. It can also
store and share video files, large data files,
digital photos, and other large files with other
people that have access to a CD-ROM drive. - DVDRW is a DVD-Rewritable disc, a DVD that can
be written to erased many times (up to 1000).
131GB Compact Flash Card / Other Storage
- The 1 GB CompactFlash (CF) Card retains data
even if the system's power supply is switched
off, thus offering significant data protection.
The CF card features an integrated controller
which stores all IDE and ATA commands, making the
CF card fully compatible with all operating
systems, utilities and application programs that
support industry-standard IDE disk drives.
CompactFlash requires no special Flash File
systems or drivers.? - The USB Memory Key is an active device with its
own central processing unit (CPU) and is capable
of supporting and running multiple applications
directly from the product. - Floppy drive records up to 1.44 MB of data on a
rugged 3.5" removable magnetic diskette. Floppy
disk drive has been available in the industry for
many years and is ideal for inexpensively
transferring small file from one computer to
another, backing up the small amount of data, or
creating a boot disk
14Dell Wireless Keyboard and Optical Mouse
- The keyboard is the primary tool used to
interface with the computer. It is a necessary
and often overlooked component to an enjoyable
computer experience. - Key factors when choosing the right keyboard
include comfort, convenience and ease of use. For
customers who wish to minimize the appearance of
wires/cords on their desktop, a wireless keyboard
and mouse solution is available. - Radio technology is used to communicate between
the keyboard and the receiver - There are three general types of keyboard
technology - PS/2 - PS/2 technology is an older, stable and
very reliable technology. PS/2 keyboards plug
into the PS/2 connector ports located on the back
of the computer. - USB - USB technology is newer than PS/2 It is
generally more responsive to the touch than PS/2.
USB keyboards plug into the USB connector ports
located on the back of the computer. - Wireless - Wireless technology is fairly new in
the marketplace It was created to answer the
customer needs for a clutter free desktop.
Wireless products consist of the actual keyboard
as well as a receiver. The receiver communicates
between the computer and the wireless keyboard
using either radio or infrared technology. Some
wireless solutions include both the wireless
keyboard and the wireless mouse. - Great mouse performance! Optical technology
records motion more precisely, glides more easily
than a mouse ball, and has no moving parts to
wear out or clean.
15Dell 5650 5.1 Surround Sound Speaker System with
Subwoofer
- Speakers are a good choice for improving the
quality of multimedia presentations, online
training / web casts, music listening, gaming,
and DVD playback on the computer system. - Dell 5650 5.1 Surround Speakers Total surround
sound, great for listening to DVD-Audio,
DVD-Video, or that 3D audio gaming experience.
Center channel speaker features unique flat panel
mountable capability. - Multi-Channel Audio Many popular multimedia
formats support multi-channel audio or surround
sound. Dolby Digital 5.1 DVD movies and
DirectSound3D games support multi-channel
playback. The stereo is two channels, meaning two
speakers.
16IEEE 1394 Adapter
- This adapter enables the computer to capture
video from a digital camcorder or connect
external hard drives. The IEEE 1394 adapter is a
connection standard like the USB (Universal
Serial Bus) and because of its ability to move
data quickly (up to 400Mbits/sec) it is primarily
used to capture video from digital camcorders or
to connect external hard drives.
1756K PCI Telephony Modem
- Modems will be discussed in chapter 6.
18Part II Other Computer System Hardware
19Computer System Types
- Personal Computers (PCs) are used by individual
users (desktops, laptops, notebooks,
sub-notebooks, Handheld (palmtop) - Network computers are cheaper versions of PCs and
are primarily used to access the Internet and
other networks - Workstations are high-end microcomputers and use
RISC processors - Midrange computers (mini computers) are systems
that accommodate several users at a time - Mainframe computers are large, powerful computers
often shared by hundreds of concurrent users - Supercomputers are the most powerful computer
systems used often in military and research
organizations trying to solve complex problems.
20The Mainboard
- A mainboard is the foundation of the computer.
- Important mainboard components
- Microprocessor Socket houses the Central
Processing Unit (CPU). - Memory Sockets are used to add memory to the
computer. - Expansion slots house controller cards.
- Buses transfer the data in the mainboard.
- BIOS (basic input/output system) gives the first
instructions to the computer (look for BIOS that
supports Plug and Play). - Chip Sets control the memory I/O, the bus I/O,
the interrupt requests (IRQs) and in many cases
the hard disk controllers. If the CPU is the
heart of the computer, chip sets are the
pacemakers.
21The Processor
- The processor or Central Processing Unit (CPU)
is the heart of the computer because it
ultimately controls all its functions. There are - CISC (Complex Instruction Set Computing) and
- RISC (Reduced Instruction Set Computing)
processors
22Execution of an Instruction
- The execution of a machine-level instruction
involves two phases the instruction and the
execution phase. - In the instruction phase (I-time)
- Step 1 Fetch instruction The control unit
accesses the instruction from memory - Step 2 Decode instruction The instruction is
decoded and relevant data is moved from memory to
the register storage area, and the location of
the next instruction is identified - In the execution phase (E-time)
- Step 3 Execute the Instruction- The ALU does
what is instructed to do (arithmetic operation or
comparison) - Step 4 Store results- The results are stored in
registers or memory
- Measurements
- Microseconds (1 millionth)
- Nanoseconds (1 billionth)
- Picoseconds (1 trillionth)
- MIPS
23CPU characteristics
- Machine cycle time is the time in which a machine
cycle occurs (instruction execution phases).
Machine cycle is usually measured in time
intervals (i.e.microseconds) or MIPS (million
instructions per second). - Wordlength is the number of bits the CPU can
process at any one time. Wordlenght is measured
in bits (i.e., 64 bits). - Bus line width is the number of bits a bus line
can transfer from the CPU to other components and
is also measured in bits (i.e., 64 bits).
24RAM and ROM
- Random Access Memory (RAM) is a volatile primary
storage location that the processor uses to store
our data during processing. - Read Only Memory (ROM) is a non volatile memory
and as a result its content is permanent.
25Cache memory
- Cache memory (SRAM-Static RAM) is a very fast and
expensive memory type that holds data frequently
used by the CPU so the CPU does not have to rely
only on slower RAM. When we talk about cache, we
are usually talking about Level 2 cache (external
to the processor). Many vendors will offer
cache-less PCs at a lower price.
26Controller Cards
- Controller cards are hardware devices that
control the operations of hardware peripherals.
Every component that is attached to the computer
needs a controller card. - The monitor needs a monitor controller card to
function - The hard drive and the floppy drives need a
controller card - Speakers attached to the computer need a sound
card - A CD-ROM needs a CD-ROM controller card
- The controller card must be compatible with the
peripheral and the mainboard (i.e., a VGA monitor
needs a VGA controller card, a SCSI CD-ROM needs
a SCSI controller card)
27Ports
- Ports are hardware devices used to connect the
computer with other hardware components called
peripherals. Ports are the attachment points of
these peripherals to the computer. - Some peripheral hardware components are the
mouse, the printer and the CD-ROM drive - Common port types are
- The Serial Port
- The Parallel Port
- The Game Port
- USB Port
28Other Input Devices
- Voice-recognition devices
- Digital computer cameras
- Scanning devices
- Optical data readers (OCR and OMR)
- Magnetic ink character recognition (MICR)
- Point-of-sale (POS) devices
- Automatic teller machines (ATM) devices
- Pen input devices
- Touch-sensitive screens
- Bar code scanners
29Points to Remember
- Computer System
- How to buy a computer
- Other Computer System Hardware