Title: Course Number: 90210720
1?????
- Course Number 90210720
- Credits 3
- Time Monday 2, 3, 4 (910AM-1210PM)
- Classroom New CSIE Classroom 102
- Classification Required for CSIE freshmen
- Prerequisite None
- Instructor Chiou-Shann Fuh (???)
- Office New Computer Science and Information
Engineering 327 - Phone 23625336 ext. 327, 23630231 ext. 3232 ext.
327 - Office Hours Tuesday 9AM-11AM
- Objective To introduction to computer science
through extensive course projects.
2- Textbook P. Norton, Peter Norton's Computing
Fundamentals, 5th Ed., McGraw-Hill, New York,
2003. - Reference P. Norton, Peter Norton's Introduction
to Computers, 5th Ed., McGraw-Hill, New York,
2003. (only two more units at the end) - Reference G. B. Shelly, T. J. Cashman, and M. E.
Vermaat, Discovering Computers 2003, Thomson
Course Technology, Boston, MA 2002. - Reference M. M. Mano, Computer Engineering
Hardware Design, Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs,
NJ, 1988. - Reference J. G. Brookshear, Computer Science An
Overview, 7th Ed., Addison Wesley, Reading, MA,
2003. - excellent World Wide Web address to look up
computer terminology online http//www.pcwebopedia
.com - excellent World Wide Web address to search
companies, products, and events
http//www.google.com - Projects will be assigned every week or every
other week (30) - Examinations one midterm (30) and one final
(40)
3- Unit 1 The Amazing Computer
- Section 1A Introduction to Computer Systems
- Section 1B Introduction to the Internet
- Unit 2 Interacting with Your Computer
- Section 2A Standard Input Devices
- Section 2B Alternative Input Devices
- Unit 3 Output Devices
- Section 3A Monitors and Sound Systems
- Section 3B Devices That Output Hard Copy
- Unit 4 Processing Data
- Section 4A Transforming Data into Information
- Section 4B CPUs Used in Personal Computers
4- Unit 5 Storing Information in a Computer
- Section 5A Types of Storage Devices
- Section 5B Measuring and Improving Drive
Performance - Unit 6 The Operating System and User Interface
- Section 6A Operating System Basics
- Section 6B PC Operating Systems
- Unit 7 Networks and Data Communications
- Section 7A Networking Basics
- Section 7B Networking the Home, the Office, and
the Globe - Unit 8 The Internet and Online Resources
- Section 8A Internet Basics
- Section 8B Getting Online, Working Online
5- Unit 9 Application Software Word Processors and
Spreadsheets - Section 9A Word Processing and Desktop
Publishing Software - Section 9B Spreadsheet Software
- Unit 10 Application Software Presentation
Programs and Databases - Section 10A Presentation Programs
- Section 10B Database Management Systems
- Unit 11 Graphics and Multimedia
- Section 11A Graphics and Graphics Software
- Section 11B Understanding Multimedia
- Unit 12 Development of Information Systems
- Section 12A The Basics of Information Systems
- Section 12B Building Information Systems
6I have a dream. Martin Luther King Jr.
- ACM Association for Computing Machinery
- ACM International Collegiate Programming Contest
- http//acm.uva.es/problemset/
- solving 20 problems 5 points, 50 problems 10
points - 100 problems 20 points, 200 problems 30
points - all problems with on-line judge 40 points
- tell me the number of problems solved immediately
after final examination
7lesson 1
An Overview of the Computer System
8- This lesson includes the following sections
- The Parts of a Computer System
- Looking Inside the Machine
- Software Bringing the Machine to Life
9The Parts of a Computer System
- What is a Computer?
- Hardware
- Software
- Data
- Users
10The Parts of a Computer System - What is a
Computer?
A computer is an electronic device used to
process data.
- A computer can convert data into information that
is useful to people. - A complete computer system includes four distinct
parts
Hardware Software Data User
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12The Parts of a Computer System - Hardware
- A computer's hardware consists of electronic
devices the parts you can see and touch. - The term "device" refers to any piece of hardware
used by the computer, such as a keyboard,
monitor, modem, mouse, etc.
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14The Parts of a Computer System - Software
- Software also called programs consists of
organized sets of instructions for controlling
the computer. - Some programs exist for the computer's use, to
help it manage its own tasks and devices. - Other programs exist for the user, and enable the
computer to perform tasks for you, such as
creating documents.
15The Parts of a Computer System - Data
- Data consists of raw facts, which the computer
can manipulate and process into information that
is useful to people. - Computerized data is digital, meaning that it has
been reduced to digits, or numbers. The computer
stores and reads all data as numbers. - Although computers use data in digital form, they
convert data into forms that people can
understand, such as text, numerals, sounds, and
images.
16Ten different symbols in the decimal system
Numbers above 9 use more than 1 digit
17The Parts of a Computer System Users
- People are the computer's operators, or users.
- Some types of computers can operate without much
intervention from people, but personal computers
are designed specifically for use by people.
18Looking Inside the Machine
- Types of Hardware
- The CPU
- Memory
- How Memory is Measured
- Input and Output Devices
- Storage Devices
19Looking Inside the Machine Types of Hardware
A computer's hardware devices are categorized as
follows
- Processor
- Memory
- Input and output (I/O) devices
- Storage devices
2001101111
10001111
01101010
10000000
01001010
21Looking Inside the Machine - The CPU
The procedure that transforms raw data into
useful information is called processing. This
function is divided between the computer's
processor and memory.
The processor is also called the central
processing unit (CPU). It manages all devices and
performs the actual processing of data.
The CPU consists of one or more chips attached to
the computer's main circuit board (the
motherboard).
22Looking Inside the Machine - Memory
- Memory also consists of chips attached to the
motherboard. - Memory holds data and program instructions as the
CPU works with them. This memory is called Random
Access Memory (RAM). - The CPU can find any piece of data
- in RAM, when it needs it for processing.
- RAM is volatile, meaning it holds data
- only when the power is on. When the power
- is off, RAM's contents are lost.
23Looking Inside the Machine How Memory is
Measured
- The smallest usable unit of measure for memory is
the byte the amount of memory required to hold
one character, like the letter A or the numeral
2. - Computers work with larger chunks of data,
measured in multiple bytes, as shown below
Unit Approx. Value Actual Value
(bytes) (bytes) Kilobyte (KB) 1,000
1,024 Megabyte (MB) 1,000,000
1,048,576 Gigabyte (GB) 1,000,000,000
1,073,741,824 Terabyte (TB) 1,000,000,000,000
1,099,511,627,776
24Looking Inside the Machine Input and Output
Devices
- Input devices accept data and instructions from
the user or from another computer system. The
keyboard and mouse are examples of input devices. - Output devices return processed data back to the
user or to another computer system. The printer
and monitor are examples. - Communications devices (such as modems and
network interface cards) perform both input and
output, allowing computers to share information.
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26Looking Inside the Machine - Storage Devices
- Storage devices hold data not currently being
used by the CPU. Data is commonly stored on a
magnetic or optical disk. Each type uses a
special medium for storing data on its surface. - A disk drive is a device that reads data from and
writes data to a disk. Most new computers feature
a floppy disk drive, a hard disk drive, and an
optical disk drive. - The most common optical storage devices are
CD-ROM and DVD-ROM drives.
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28Software Bringing the Machine to Life
- What is Software?
- System Software
- Application Software
29Bringing the Machine to Life What is Software?
- Software is a set of electronic instructions that
tells the computer how to do certain tasks. A set
of instructions is often called a program. - When a computer is using a particular program, it
is said to be running or executing the program. - The two most common types of programs are system
software and application software.
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31Bringing the Machine to Life System Software
- System software exists primarily for the computer
itself, to help the computer perform specific
functions. - One major type of system software is the
operating system (OS). All computers require an
operating system. - The OS tells the computer how to interact with
the user and its own devices. -
- Common operating systems include Windows, the
Macintosh OS, OS/2, and UNIX .
32Difference between Operating Systems
- Never turn off Solaris, FreeBSD, Linux, Windows
NT, or Windows 2000 workstations because of
rlogin and background jobs
33Bringing the Machine to Life - Applications
- Application software tells the computer how to
accomplish tasks the user requires, such as
creating a document or editing a graphic image. - Some important kinds of application software are
Word processing programs Spreadsheet
software Database management Presentation
programs Graphics programs Networking software
Web design tools and browsers Internet
applications Communications programs
Utilities Entertainment and education
Multimedia authoring
34lesson 1 review
- List the four parts of a computer system.
- Identify four types of computer hardware.
- List five units of measure for computer memory
and storage. - Provide two examples of input and output devices.
- Name and describe three types of storage devices.
- Differentiate the two main categories of computer
software. - List four specific types of application software.
35Project due Sep. 30
- Open your personal computer at home and list the
hardware specification as detailed as possible,
including the manufacturer, product type, and
serial number. List every software installed on
your personal computer. For example - PC ??
- CPU Intel Pentium 4 1.8G Hz
- Motherboard S45GMAX
- SDRAM 256MB DDR
- AGP 3D/64MB SGRAM
- hard disk 60GB
- floppy disk drive 1.44MB
- monitor Lemel 17 inch TFT-LCD, Model LC-AE
- power supply 250W, ATX compatible
- keyboard 104 keys Chinese-English
- CD-ROM drive 52 times speed
- sound blaster card
- speakers Trois DS 621G
- mouse Logitech Wheel Mouse, M/N M-BJ58, P/N
830513-1000 - anti-virus software Norton AntiVirus
- anti-virus software Trend Micro/Internet Phone
- OS Microsoft Windows XP
- productivity software Microsoft Office XP