Millions of electronic pulses move through your computer every second. Computers are capable of processing thousands of functions in the time it takes.

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Presentation transcript:

Millions of electronic pulses move through your computer every second. Computers are capable of processing thousands of functions in the time it takes you to blink your eye.

Produce and stores results Process data into information Data that is organized, meaningful, and useful Accept data Raw facts, figures, and symbols Computers process and store data using the binary number system

Computers have their own code, or language and can process only two numbers: 1 and 0 All information used by a computer must first be changed into this code so the computer can “understand” it. The code is then used to send short bursts of electricity through the computer. The computer then processes the information.

Binary code Binary code is the language of computers All data a computer processes is turned into a string of 1s and 0s The binary number system uses only two binary digits – 1 and 0 Computers process and store data using the binary number system

Data entered into a computer turns into electronic pulses Transistors inside your computer act as on/off switches to create the language you computed and processes the data into information Each electronic pulse equals either “on” or “off” Computers use these two choices to process all the data we give them

Each binary digit, 0 or 1, is a BIT A BIT the smallest unit of data a computer can process 1 = a short burst of electricity ON 0 = means no electricity OFF All letters, numbers, and symbols we use are represented by eight bits The word “cool” in binary numbers

BYTE = 8 bits A BYTE is the amount of information your computer needs to produce one character (letter, number, or symbol) Inside the computer, electronic pulses move through the circuit board to the computer chips When an electronic pulse reaches a chip, it turns each switch ON or OFF in an exact order Each letter, number, punctuation mark, and character on the keyboard has its own pattern of 1s and 0s

"This computer has a 32-bit Pentium processor with 64 megabytes of RAM and 2.1 gigabytes of hard disk space." What does it all mean? Bytes are used to measure the amount of information a device can store. Both RAM and hard disk capacities are measured in bytes. The size of saved computer files are also measured in bytes. A five-page research paper may use 40,000 bytes A movie on a DVD holds around 5 million bytes

You have learned that computers work in binary and that information inside of computers is coded using 0s and 1s. In the early years of computers, different types of computers used the binary system in different ways. The code for the letters in the word DOG were different in different brands of computers. Eventually, a set of standards was developed. The computer manufacturers agreed to use one code called the ASCII code. ASCII stands for American Standard Code for Information Interchange. The ASCII code is an 8-bit code. Thus, it used eight bits to represents a letter. Eight bits are called a byte. Each letter (upper and lower case), number and symbol is represented by an 8-bit ASCII code.

binary code – computer code using binary number system in which numbers and letters are translated into signals that a computer reads as sequences of ones and zeros. data – information such as numbers, text, images, and sounds, in a form that is suitable for storage in or processing by a computer.

byte- eight bits kilobyte- 1,024 bytes megabyte – 1,024 kilobytes gigabyte- 1,024 megabytes bit – one binary number (0 or 1) *usually travel around the computer in groups of eight

June 23, 2012 would have been the 100th birthday of Alan Turing, an exceptionally gifted mathematician, computer scientist and code breaker. His Turing machine, developed in 1936, was the basis for so much in computing. A Turing machine is a device that manipulates symbols on a strip of tape according to a table of rules. Turing, often referred to as the father of computing and artificial intelligence, is best known for his contribution to cracking the German Enigma secret codes during WWII, allowing the Allies to track German military and naval units and destroy them. Before the war started, Turing had already made an impact on the theory that would pave the way for the construction of the first computers. A functioning Turing machine, a representation of the computing device, is the Google Doodle created to commemorate Alan Turing’s birthday. It contains a series of 1s and 0s and arrows pointing to left and right. The ultimate goal is to use the arrows to spell out the word Google in binary. Interactive version of computing device celebrates 100th anniversary of birth of Enigma code breaker

Click on the image below to play the video clip and learn about this Google doodle.