1 / 58

Chapter 2

Chapter 2. Computer Hardware. Chapter Contents. Section A: Personal Computer Basics Section B: Microprocessors and Memory Section C: Storage Devices Section D: Input and Output Devices Section E: Hardware Security. Personal Computer Basics. Personal Computer Systems

Download Presentation

Chapter 2

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 2 Computer Hardware

  2. Chapter Contents • Section A: Personal Computer Basics • Section B: Microprocessors and Memory • Section C: Storage Devices • Section D: Input and Output Devices • Section E: Hardware Security Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  3. Personal Computer Basics • Personal Computer Systems • Desktop and Portable Computers • Home, Media, Game, and Small Business Systems • Buying Computer System Components Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  4. Personal Computer Systems Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  5. Desktop and Portable Computers • The term form factor refers to the size and dimensions of a component, such as a system board or system unit • A desktop computer fits on a desk and runs on power from an electrical wall outlet Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  6. Desktop and Portable Computers • A portable computer is a small, lightweight personal computer • A notebook computer (also referred to as a laptop), is a small, lightweight portable computer that opens like a clamshell to reveal a screen and keyboard • A tablet computer is a portable computing device featuring a touch-sensitive screen that can be used as a writing or drawing pad • An ultra-mobile PC (UMPC) is a small form factor tablet computer designed to run most of the software available for larger portable computers Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  7. Desktop and Portable Computers Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  8. Home, Media, Game, and Small Business Systems • A home computer system offers a hardware platform with adequate, but not super-charged support for most computer applications • A Media Center PC includes components for integrating computers, televisions, home theaters, and audio systems • Some of the most cutting-edge computers are designed for gaming • Computers marketed for small business applications tend to be middle-of-the-line models pared down to essentials Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  9. Buying Computer System Components • Browse through computer magazines and online computer stores to get a general idea of features and prices • Decide on a budget and stick to it • Make a list of the ways you plan to use your computer • Select a platform • Decide on a form factor • Select peripherals, software, and accessories Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  10. Buying Computer System Components • Instead of buying a new computer, you might consider upgrading Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  11. Microprocessors and Memory • Microprocessor Basics • Today’s Microprocessors • Random Access Memory • Read-only Memory • EEPROM Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  12. Microprocessor Basics • A microprocessor is an integrated circuit designed to process instructions • Usually the most expensive component of a computer Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  13. Microprocessor Basics • Microprocessor clock • Megahertz • Gigahertz • Front side bus • HyperTransport • Word size • Cache • Level 1 cache (L1) • Level 2 cache (L2) • CISC vs. RISC technology Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  14. Microprocessor Basics • Serial processing • Pipelining • Parallel processing • Multi-core processor • Hyper-Threading Technology Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  15. Today’s Microprocessors Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  16. Random Access Memory • Random Access Memory is a temporary holding area for data, application program instructions, and the operating system Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  17. Random Access Memory • Microscopic capacitors hold the bits that represent data • Most RAM is volatile • Requires electrical power to hold data Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  18. Random Access Memory • RAM capacity is expressed in megabytes or gigabytes • Personal computers typically feature between 256MB and 4GB of RAM • An area of the hard disk, called virtual memory, can be used if an application runs out of allocated RAM Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  19. Random Access Memory • RAM speed is often expressed in nanoseconds or megahertz • SDRAM is fast and relatively inexpensive • DDR, DDR2, or DDR3 • RDRAM is more expensive, and usually found in high-performance workstations Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  20. Read-Only Memory • ROM is a type of memory circuitry that holds the computer’s startup routine • Permanent and non-volatile • The ROM BIOS tells the computer how to access the hard disk, find the operating system, and load it into RAM Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  21. EEPROM • Electrically Erasable Programmable Read-Only Memory • More permanent than RAM, and less permanent than ROM • Requires no power to hold data Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  22. Storage Devices • Storage Basics • Magnetic Disk and Tape Technology • CD, DVD, and Blu-ray Technology • Solid State Storage • Storage Wrap-up Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  23. Storage Basics • A storage medium contains data • A storage device records and retrieves data from a storage medium • Data gets copied from a storage device into RAM, where it waits to be processed • Processed data is held temporarily in RAM before it is copied to a storage medium • Vertical vs. horizontal storage Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  24. Magnetic Disk and Tape Technology • Magnetic storage stores data by magnetizing microscopic particles on the disk or tape surface Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  25. Magnetic Disk and Tape Technology Hard disk platters and read-write heads are sealed inside the drive case or cartridge to screen out dust and other contaminants. Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  26. Magnetic Disk and Tape Technology • A hard disk controller positions the disk and read-write heads to locate data • SATA • Ultra ATA • EIDE • SCSI • Not as durable as many other storage technologies • Head crash Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  27. Magnetic Disk and Tape Technology • A floppy disk is a round piece of flexible mylar plastic covered with a thin layer of magnetic oxide and sealed inside a protective casing • A tape drive is a device that reads data from and writes data to a long stream of recordable media similar to the tapes used in audio cassettes • A tape is a sequential storage medium Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  28. CD, DVD, and Blu-ray Technology • Optical storage stores data as microscopic light and dark spots on the disk surface • CD, DVD, and Blu-ray storage technologies Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  29. CD, DVD, and Blu-ray Technology • Today’s DVD drives typically have 20X speeds for a data transfer rate of 210 Mbps • Three categories of optical technologies • Read-only (ROM) • Recordable (R) • Rewritable (RW) Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  30. CD-DA DVD-Video CD-ROM DVD-ROM CD-R DVD+R or DVD-R CD-RW DVD+RW or DVD-RW BD-ROM, BD-R, and BD-RE CD, DVD, and Blu-ray Technology Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  31. CD, DVD, and Blu-ray Technology Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  32. Solid State Storage • Solid state storage technology stores data in an erasable, rewritable circuitry • Non-volatile • Card reader may be required to read data on solid state storage Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  33. Solid State Storage • A USB flash drive is a portable storage device that plugs directly into a computer’s system unit using a built-in connector • A U3 drive is a special type of USB flash drive that is preconfigured to autoplay when it is inserted into a computer Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  34. Storage Wrap-up Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  35. Storage Wrap-up Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  36. Input and Output Devices • Basic Input Devices • Display Devices • Printers • Installing Peripheral Devices Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  37. Basic Input Devices • Keyboard • Pointing device • Mice • Trackballs • Pointing Sticks • Trackpads • Joystick • Touch-sensitive screen Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  38. Display Devices • A CRT display device uses a glass tube • An LCD manipulates light within a layer of liquid crystal cells • Plasma screen technology illuminates lights arranged in a panel-like screen Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  39. Display Devices • Viewable image size • Dot pitch • Viewing angle width • Refresh rate • Color depth • Resolution • VGA, SVGA, XGA, SXGA, UXGA, WUXGA, and WQXGA Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  40. Display Devices Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  41. Display Devices • Graphics circuitry generates the signals for displaying an image on the screen • Integrated graphics • Graphics card • Graphics processing unit (GPU) Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  42. Printers • An ink-jet printer has a nozzle-like print head that sprays ink onto paper • A laser printer works like a photocopier Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  43. Printers Laser printers are a popular technology when high-volume output or good-quality printouts are required. Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  44. Printers • Dot matrix printers produce characters and graphics by using a grid of fine wires • The wires strike a ribbon and the paper Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  45. Printers • Printer features • Resolution • Print speed • Duty cycle • Operating costs • Duplex capability • Memory • Networkability Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  46. Installing Peripheral Devices • Many new devices can be connected to an external USB port • The data bus moves data within the computer • Expansion cards are small circuit boards that give the computer additional capabilities • Expansion slot • ISA • PCI • AGP Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  47. Installing Peripheral Devices An expansion card simply slides into an expansion slot and is secured with a small screw. Before you open the case, make sure you unplug the computer and ground yourself—that’s technical jargon for releasing static electricity by using a special grounding wristband or by touching both hands to a metal object. Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  48. Installing Peripheral Devices • An expansion port passes data in and out of a computer or peripheral device • Peripheral device may include the Plug and Play feature, or require a device driver Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  49. Installing Peripheral Devices Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

  50. Hardware Security • Anti-theft Devices • Surge Protection and Battery Backup • Basic Maintenance • Troubleshooting and Repair Chapter 2: Computer Hardware

More Related