Title: Hardware Basics: Peripherals
1Chapter 3
- Hardware Basics Peripherals
2Chapter Outline
- Input From Person to Processor
- Output From Pulses to People
- Storage Devices Input meets Output
- Computer Systems The Sum of Its Parts
We swim in a sea of information. Gary Snyder,
poet
3Input From Person to Processor
4The Keyboard
- The most common input device is the keyboard,
which is used to enter letters, numbers and
special characters.
5Working with the Keyboard
- Function keys are special purpose keys whose
function depends on the software being used. - Cursor keys are used to move the cursor up,
down, left, or right.
6Variations on Keyboard Design
- Ergonomic
- to address repetitive stress injuries
- Wireless
- Folding
- Half
7Pointing Devices
8Reading Tools
- Input devices read directly from paper and
convert printed information into bit patterns
that can be processed by the computer.
- Optical-mark readers
- Bar-code readers
- Magnetic-ink character readers
- Wand readers
- Pen scanners
9Digitizing the Real World
- Scanner
- Digital camera
- Speech recognition
- Sensing devices
- Audio and video digitizers
10Scanners
- Scanners capture and digitize printed images.
There are several types of scanners - Flatbed scanners
- Handheld scanners
- Sheet-fed scanners
11Digital Cameras
- Digital cameras capture snapshots and store them
as bit patterns on disks or other storage media.
12Video Digitizers
- Video digitizers capture input from video
sources such as video camera and convert it to a
digital signal that can be stored in memory and
displayed on a computer screen.
13Audio Digitizers
- Audio digitizers capture spoken words, music and
sound effects and convert them to digitized
sounds. - These sounds can be stored in a computers memory
and modified with computer software.
14Sensing Devices
- Sensing devices are used to monitor temperature,
humidity, pressure and other physical quantities. - The data collected provides data for use in
robotics, environmental climate control, weather
forecasting and other applications.
15Output From Pulses to People
- Screen Output
- Paper Output
- Sound Output
- Controlling Other Machines
16Screen Output
- A monitor or video display terminal (VDT)
displays characters, graphics, photographic
images, animation and video. - Video adapterconnects the monitor to the
computer - VRAM or video memorya special portion of RAM to
hold video images (the more video memory, the
more detail of a picture displayed)
17Screen Talk
- Monitor size - measured as a diagonal line across
the screen. - Pixels (or picture element) - tiny dots that
compose a picture - Resolution - the number of pixels displayed on
the screen (the higher the resolution, the closer
together the dots)
18Image Quality
- Image quality is affected by resolution and color
depth (or bit depth) - Color depth refers to the number of different
colors a monitor displays at the same time
19Examples of Color Depth
20Monitor Classes
LCD (liquid crystal display)
21Cathode Ray Tube (CRT)
- The cathode ray tube has the following
characteristics - Low cost
- Speedy response time
- Clear image
22Liquid Crystal Display (LCD)
- Light-weight
- Compact
- Flat-panel
- Used in overhead projection panels and video
projectors to project computer images - More expensive than CRTs
- Increasingly being seen with desktop computers
23Paper Output
- Printers produce paper output or hard copy
- 2 kinds of printers
- Impact printers
- Non-impact printers
24Impact Printers
- Line printer
- Used by mainframes to produce massive printouts
- Limited to printing characters
- Dot matrix printer
- Images created by a matrix of tiny dots
- Low print quality
- Low cost
25Non-impact Printers
- A laser beam reflected off a rotating drum to
create patterns of electrical charges - Faster and more expensive than dot matrix
printer - High-resolution output
26More on Non-impact Printers
- Sprays ink onto paper to produce printed text and
graphic images - Prints fewer pages/minute than laser printer
- High-quality color costing less than laser printer
27 Additional Output Devices
- Multifunction peripheral or MFP combines a
scanner, printer and a fax modem. - A plotter is an automated drawing tool that can
produce large, finely scaled engineering
blueprints and maps.
28Output You Can Hear
- A sound card allows the PC to accept microphone
input, play music and other sounds through
speakers or headphones. - Synthesizers are included in sound cards and have
specialized circuitry designed to generate sounds
electronically.
29Controlling Other Machines
- Output devices take bit patterns and turn them
into non-digital movements.
- Robot arms
- Telephone switchboards
- Transportation devices
- Automated factory equipment
- Spacecraft
- Digiscents
30Rules of Thumb Ergonomics Health
- Choose equipment thats ergonomically designed
- Create a healthy workspace
- Build flexibility into your work environment
- Rest your eyes
- Stretch to loosen tight muscles
- Listen to your body
31Storage Devices Input Meets Output
- Secondary storage devices are computer
peripherals capable of performing both input and
output functions - Information is stored semi-permanently on tape
and disk drives - Examples of storage devices
- Magnetic tapes and disks
- Zip, Jaz and SuperDisks
- Optical disks
32Magnetic Media
- Magnetic tapes
- Sequential access
- Can store large amounts of information in a small
space at a relatively low cost - Limitation sequential access
- Used mainly for backup purposes
33Magnetic Media
- Magnetic drives
- Random access
- Floppy disks for inexpensive, portable storage
- Hard disks are non-removable, rigid disks that
spin continuously and rapidly thus providing much
faster access than a floppy disk. - Removable media (Zip Jaz disks) provide
high-capacity portable storage.
34Optical Media
- Optical disk drive uses laser beams to read and
write bits of information on the disk surface.
- Not as fast as magnetic hard disks
- Massive storage capacity and reliability
35Types of Optical Media
- CD-ROM drives are optical drives that read
CD-ROMs. - CD-R are WORM media (write-once, read many).
- CD-RW can read CD-ROMs and write, erase and
rewrite data onto CD-R CD-RW disks. - DVD (digital versatile disks) store distribute
all kinds of data. They hold between 3.8 and 17
gigabytes of information.
36Solid-state Storage Devices
- Flash memory is an erasable memory chip.
- Compact alternative
- No moving parts
- Designed for specific applications such as
storing pictures in digital cameras - Likely to replace disk and tape storage
37Ports and Slots Revisited
- The system or motherboard includes several
standard ports - Serial Port for attaching devices that
send/receive messages one bit at a time (modems) - Parallel Port for attaching devices that
send/receive bits in groups (printers) - Keyboard/Mouse Port for attaching a keyboard and
a mouse
38More on Ports and Slots
- Other ports are typically included on expansion
boards rather than the system board - Video Port used to plug in a color monitor into
the video board - Microphone, speaker, headphone, MIDI ports used
to attach sound equipment - SCSI port allows several peripherals to be
strung together and attached to a single port
39Internal and External Drives
- Hard drive
- Bays
- Hot swapping
- CD or DVD
- Floppy disk
- Zip Drive
- SCSI port
40Expansion Made Easy
- With the open architecture of the PC and the
introduction of new interfaces, you can hot swap
devices.
- USB (Universal Serial Bus) transmits a hundred
times faster than a PC serial port - Firewire (IEEE 1394) can move data between
devices at 400 or more megabits per second - high speed makes it ideal for data-intensive work
like digital video
41Putting It All Together with Networks
- A typical computer system might have several
different input, output, and storage peripherals.
The key is compatibility. - Networks blur the boundaries between computers.
- Networked computers may have access to all the
peripherals on a system. - The computer is, in effect, just a tiny part of a
global system of interconnected networks. b
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