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Tomorrow’s Technology and You 8/e Chapter 2 Hardware Basics: Inside the Box.

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Presentation on theme: "Tomorrow’s Technology and You 8/e Chapter 2 Hardware Basics: Inside the Box."— Presentation transcript:

1 Tomorrow’s Technology and You 8/e Chapter 2 Hardware Basics: Inside the Box

2 The System Unit What is the system unit? p. 134 Fig. 4-1 Next  Case that contains electronic components of the computer used to process data

3 The System Unit What are common components inside the system unit? p. 135 Fig. 4-2 Next  Memory  Adapter cards  Sound card  Video card  Drive bays  Power supply  Processor

4 The System Unit What is the motherboard? p. 136 Fig. 4-3 Next  Main circuit board in system unit  Contains expansion slots, processor chips, and memory slots  Sometimes called a system board Click to view Web Link, click Chapter 4, click Web Link from left navigation, then click Motherboards below Chapter 4

5 The System Unit What is a chip? p. 136 Next  Small piece of semi-conducting material on which integrated circuits are etched  Integrated circuits contain many microscopic pathways capable of carrying electrical current

6 Processor Control Unit Arithmetic Logic Unit (ALU) Processor What is the central processing unit (CPU)? p. 137 - 138 Fig. 4-4 Next Input Devices Storage Devices Output Devices  Interprets and carries out basic instructions that operate a computer Memory DataInformation Instructions Data Information Control Unit  Control unit directs and coordinates operations in computer  Arithmetic logic unit (ALU) performs arithmetic, comparison, and logical operations  Also called the processor

7 Processor Control Unit Memory ALU Processor What is a machine cycle? p. 138 Fig. 4-5 Next Step 1. Fetch Obtain program instruction or data item from memory Step 2. Decode Translate instruction into commands Step 4. Store Write result to memory Step 3. Execute Carry out command  Four operations of the CPU comprise a machine cycle

8 Memory What is memory? p. 142 Fig. 4-10 Next  Electronic components that store instructions, data, and results  Consists of one or more chips on motherboard or other circuit board  Each byte stored in unique location called an address, similar to seats in a concert hall

9 Memory How is memory measured? p. 142 Fig. 4-11 Next TermAbbreviationApproximate Size KilobyteKB or K1 thousand bytes MegabyteMB1 million bytes GigabyteGB1 billion bytes TerabyteTB1 trillion bytes  By number of bytes available for storage

10 Memory What is random access memory (RAM)? p. 143 - 144 Next The more RAM a computer has, the faster it responds Also called main memory Most RAM is volatile, it is lost when computer’s power is turned off Memory chips that can be read from and written to by processor Click to view Web Link, click Chapter 4, click Web Link from left navigation, then click RAM below Chapter 4

11 Memory What is read-only memory (ROM)? p. 145 Next Memory chips that store permanent data and instructions The data on most ROM chips cannot be modified Firmware — Manufactured with permanently written data, instructions, or information

12 Memory What is access time? p. 146 Figs. 4-15-4-16 Next  Amount of time it takes processor to read data from memory  Measured in nanoseconds (ns), one billionth of a second  It takes 1/10 of a second to blink your eye; a computer can perform up to 10 million operations in same amount of time TermSpeed MillisecondOne-thousandth of a second MicrosecondOne-millionth of a second NanosecondOne-billionth of a second PicosecondOne-trillionth of a second

13 Data Representation How do computers represent data? p. 140 Fig. 4-6 Next  Recognize only two discrete states: on or off  Use a binary system to recognize two states  Use Number system with two unique digits: 0 and 1, called bits (short for binary digits)  Computers are digital

14 Data Representation What is a byte? p. 140 Fig. 4-7 Next  Eight bits grouped together as a unit  Provides enough different combinations of 0s and 1s to represent 256 individual characters  Numbers  Uppercase and lowercase letters  Punctuation marks

15 Data Representation What are two popular coding systems to represent data? p. 140 - 141 Fig. 4-8 Next  ASCII—American Standard Code for Information Interchange  EBCDIC—Extended Binary Coded Decimal Interchange Code ASCIISymbolEBCDIC 00110000011110000 00110001111110001 00110010211110010 00110011311110011

16 Ports and Connectors What are ports and connectors? p. 148 - 149 Fig. 4-21 Next  Port connects external devices to system unit  Connector joins cable to peripheral

17 Buses What is a bus? p. 151 Fig. 4-24 Next  Channel that allows devices inside and attached to the computer to communicate with each other  System bus connects processor and main memory  Bus width determines number of bits transmitted at one time


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