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CSUDH Fall 2015 Instructor: Robert Spengler

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1 CSUDH Fall 2015 Instructor: Robert Spengler
CSC 116 Computer Hardware CSUDH Fall 2015 Instructor: Robert Spengler

2 Chapter 1: First Looks

3 Chapter 1: HDMI

4 Chapter 1: Inside

5 Chapter 1: Sharing

6 Chap 1: Motherboard Form Factors
“Form factor” affects Shape and size of motherboard Shape and size of case Screw holes in the case Type of power supply Most common: ATX. Second place: MicroATX

7 Chap 1: Hard Drives

8 Chap 2: Working Inside a Computer
IMPORTANT SAFETY TIPS Always power down and unplug a computer before working on it. Handle boards and cards by the edges. Never open a power supply or a monitor.

9 Chap 2: Working Inside a Computer
Just a matter of removing screws to access the inside. Use a ground bracelet. Remove cards by lifting straight up ( i.e. not by rocking them side to side)

10 Chap 2: Just a Heat Sink Source: wikipedia.com

11 Chap 2: Other Heat Sinks Source:Quietpc.com

12 Chap 2: Heat Sink with a Fan
Source: wikipedia.com

13 Chap 2: Water Cooling Source: pcper.com

14 Chap 2: Cooling not just for CPUs

15 Chap 2: What kind of cooling?
Passive

16 Chap 2: How about this one?
Water Cooling

17 Chap 2: Power Usage

18 Chap 2: Power Supplies Source: tigerdirect.com

19 Chap 2: Power Supplies Probably 650 Watts

20 Chap 2: Power Supplies Source: acousticpc.com

21 Chap 3: Motherboards Most important and complex part of a computer
Distributes power to most components Has many slots, ports, and varied components Everything is connected through the mobo!

22 Chap 3: A motherboard Source: wikipedia.com

23 Chap 3: Motherboard Sizes

24 Chap 3: Motherboard Sockets
Source: howstuffworks.com

25 Chap 3: CPU Manufacturers
Intel – Generally pricier but better performance. AMD – Generally cheaper but worse performance. This changes a lot. In the 90s, AMD seemed to be leading the way while Intel lagged behind.

26 Chap 3: Main Intel Chipsets
1. Northbridge-Southbridge: NB handles fast tasks (PCI-E and RAM to CPU), SB handles slow stuff ( PCI Bus, Keyboard and Mouse, etc.) 2. Nehelem : Northbridge functions moved onto CPU. 3. Sandy Bridge and beyond: Northbridge and graphics controller functions moved onto CPU.

27 Chap 3: Buses

28 Chap 3: Configuring a Motherboard
The BIOS is the first thing that runs when a computer is turned on. It initializes, tests, and/or configures hardware components. Access the BIOS by pressing a special key during boot. Usually it is F2, F10, Del or Esc.

29 Chap 3: More about BIOS BIOS can be password protected.
Settings are saved in a CMOS chip that is given constant power by a battery. Updating the BIOS with a new version is called “Flashing the BIOS”. This can be dangerous because if something goes wrong and the BIOS is damaged, the system might never boot again.

30 Chap 3: Group Activity Building your own PC
1. What motherboard form factor and why? 2. What type of socket and why? Which processor? 3. What type of expansion slots (PCI, AGP, etc.) and why? What will you put in them? 4. What wattage/type of power supply and why? 5. How much RAM and hard drive space? What case? 5. How much will it cost?

31 Chap 4: Processors Mainly manufactured by Intel and AMD
Important features of Processors: Processor Speed (900MHz, 3.2 GHz) Multiprocessing Capabilities HyperThreading (Intel) and HyperTransport Multiple Cores on one chip Socket and Chipset (PGA 988, AM3+) Architecture (32-bit or 64-bit)

32 Chap 4: More Processor Features
Memory Cache (L1,L2,L3) Supported Memory Features (DDR2,DDR3) Virtualization Support (must be enabled in BIOS) Integrated Graphics (Ivy/Sandy Bridge)

33 Chap 4: The CPU

34 Chap 4: The Cache


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