0% found this document useful (0 votes)
54 views

1 Intro2Hardware

The document provides an overview of basic computer hardware components. It discusses how hardware requires software to function and direct its tasks. The main hardware components include input devices like keyboards and mice, processing components inside the computer case like the motherboard and CPU, storage devices like memory, hard drives, and optical drives, and output devices like monitors and printers. All hardware components must communicate with the CPU in order to receive instructions from software and complete input, processing, storage, and output functions.

Uploaded by

surf6to8
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
54 views

1 Intro2Hardware

The document provides an overview of basic computer hardware components. It discusses how hardware requires software to function and direct its tasks. The main hardware components include input devices like keyboards and mice, processing components inside the computer case like the motherboard and CPU, storage devices like memory, hard drives, and optical drives, and output devices like monitors and printers. All hardware components must communicate with the CPU in order to receive instructions from software and complete input, processing, storage, and output functions.

Uploaded by

surf6to8
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 47

Chapter 1

Introducing Hardware
Objectives

• Learn that a computer requires both hardware and


software to work
• Learn about the many different hardware
components inside of and connected to a computer

2
Hardware Needs Software to Work

• Hardware
– Computer’s physical components
• Monitor, keyboard, memory, hard drive
• Software
– Instruction set
• Directs hardware to accomplish a task
– Uses hardware for four basic functions
• Input, processing, storage, output
• Hardware components
– Require an electrical system
3
Figure 1-1 Computer activity consists of input, processing, storage,
and output
Courtesy: Course Technology/Cengage Learning

4
Hardware Needs Software to Work
(cont’d.)
• User interaction with computer
– User and software communicate with input device
– Hardware uses two states: on and off

Figure 1-2 All communication, storage, and processing of data inside


a computer are in binary form until presented as output to the user
Courtesy: Course Technology/Cengage Learning

5
Hardware Needs Software to Work
(cont’d.)
• Binary number system
– Stores and reads two states
• Zero or one
– Bit: binary digit
• Value of zero or one
– Nibble: four bits
– Byte: eight bits
– Used for counting, calculation, storage operations
• American Standard Code for Information Interchange
(ASCII)
– Used for storing information

6
Figure 1-3 All letters and numbers are stored in a computer
as a series of bits, each represented in the computer as on
or off
Courtesy: Course Technology/Cengage Learning

7
PC Hardware Components

• Input/output (I/O) devices: external to the case


• Processing, storage devices: internal to the case
• Central processing unit (CPU)
– Also called: processor, microprocessor
– Reads input, processes data, writes data to storage
• Elements required by I/O, storage devices
– Method for CPU to communicate with the device
– Software to instruct, control the device
– Electricity to power the device

8
Hardware Used for Input and Output
• I/O device communication with computer
components
– Wireless
– Cabled using a port
• Access point located in back or front of case
• Primary input devices
– Keyboard, mouse
• Requires electricity from inside case
• Primary output devices
– Monitor: visually displays primary computer output
– Printer: produces paper output (hard copy)
9
Figure 1-4 Input/output devices connect to the computer case by
ports usually found on the back of the case
Courtesy: Course Technology/Cengage Learning

10
Figure 1-5 The keyboard and the
mouse are the two most popular Figure 1-6 The two most popular output
input devices devices are the monitor and the printer
Courtesy: Course Courtesy: Course Technology/Cengage
Technology/Cengage Learning Learning

11
Figure 1-7 Two video connectors and two connectors used
by a printer
Courtesy: Course Technology/Cengage Learning

12
Hardware Inside the Computer Case
• Storage and processing occurs in the case
• Internal devices common to most computers
– Motherboard containing CPU, memory, other parts
– Hard drive, optical drive for permanent storage
– Power supply with power cords supplying electricity
– Adapter cards for internal and external communication
– Cables to connect devices
• Adapter card installed in expansion slots
• Cable types
– Data (communication) and power

13
Figure 1-8 Inside the computer case
Courtesy: Course Technology/Cengage Learning

14
The Motherboard

• Largest, most important circuit board


– Main board or system board
– Contains the CPU, expansion slots, other devices
• Motherboard component categories
– Processing, temporary storage, communication, power
• All devices communicate with motherboard CPU
• Peripheral device links to motherboard via cable
• Motherboard ports may be outside of the case
– Keyboard, mouse, parallel, USB ports, sound ports

15
Figure 1-9 All hardware components are either located on the
motherboard or directly or indirectly connected to it because they must all
communicate with the CPU
Courtesy: Course Technology/Cengage Learning

16
Figure 1-10 A motherboard provides ports for common I/O devices
Courtesy: Course Technology/Cengage Learning

17
The Processor and the Chipset

• CPU
– Chip inside the computer
– Performs most data processing
• Chipset
– Group of microchips controlling data flow
• Personal computer (PC)
– Focus of this text
• Major CPU, chipsets manufacturers
– Intel Corporation, AMD

18
Figure 1-11 The processor is hidden underneath the fan and the
heat sink, which keep it cool
Courtesy: Course Technology/Cengage Learning

19
Storage Devices

• Primary storage (main memory)


– Temporary storage used by the processor
• Secondary storage (permanent storage)
– Enables data to persist after machine turned off
– Examples: hard drive, CD, DVD, USB drive
• Primary-secondary memory relationship analogy
– Library book stacks: permanent storage
– Books moved to a desk: temporary storage

20
Figure 1-12 Memory is a temporary place to hold
instructions and data while the CPU processes both
Courtesy: Course Technology/Cengage Learning

21
Primary Storage

• Provided by random access memory (RAM)


– Located on motherboard, adapter cards
• RAM chips
– Embedded on small board
– Plugs into motherboard
– Most common: dual inline memory module (DIMM)
– Video memory: embedded on video card
• Volatile memory
• Non-volatile memory

22
Figure 1-13 A DIMM holds RAM and is mounted directly
on a motherboard
Courtesy: Course Technology/Cengage Learning

23
Secondary Storage

• Remote storage locations containing data and


instructions
– Cannot be directly processed by CPU
– Permanent
• Hard drives
– Main secondary computer storage device
– Magnetic hard drives
• Use Integrated Drive Electronics (IDE)
– Solid state drive (SSD)
• Use nonvolatile flash memory

24
Figure 1-15 Hard drive with sealed Figure 1-16 Four SSD drives
cover removed Courtesy: Course Technology/Cengage
Courtesy: Seagate Technologies LLC Learning

25
Secondary Storage (cont’d.)
• Hard drives (cont’d.)
– ATA (AT Attachment) standard
• Specifies motherboard-hard drive interface
• Types: serial ATA (SATA), parallel ATA (PATA)
– Serial ATA standard
• External SATA (eSATA)
• Usually two to eight SATA and eSATA connectors
– Parallel ATA (PATA)
• Slower than SATA
• Two connectors on a motherboard for two data cables
• Accommodates up to four IDE devices

26
Figure 1-18 Using a parallel ATA interface, a motherboard has two IDE
connectors, each of which can accommodate two devices; a hard drive
usually connects to the motherboard using the primary IDE connector
Courtesy: Course Technology/Cengage Learning

27
Figure 1-19 Two IDE devices connected to a motherboard using both IDE
connections and two cables
Courtesy: Course Technology/Cengage Learning

28
Figure 1-20 This system has a CD-ROM and a Zip drive sharing
the secondary IDE cable and a hard drive using the primary IDE cable
Courtesy: Course Technology/Cengage Learning

29
Secondary Storage (cont’d.)

• Optical drives
– RW can write to a disk
– ROM (read-only memory) can only read a disc

Figure 1-22 This CD drive is an EIDE device and connects to the


motherboard by way of an IDE data cable
Courtesy: Course Technology/Cengage Learning
30
Secondary Storage (cont’d.)

• USB flash drives and memory cards


– Popular, nonvolatile flash memory chips
– Compact; easy to use; currently hold up to 64 GB of
data

Figure 1-24 Most laptops have a memory card slot


that can accommodate an SD card
Courtesy: Course Technology/Cengage Learning

31
Secondary Storage (cont’d.)

• Floppy drive
– Older secondary storage device
– 3.5-inch disk holding 1.44 MB of data
– Floppy drive connector
• Distinct from IDE connectors
• Floppy drive cable accommodates one or two drives

32
Motherboard Components Used For
Communication Among Devices
• Traces
– Fine lines on top and bottom of the motherboard’s
surface
• Bus
– System of pathways, transmission protocols
• Data bus
– Carries the data

33
Figure 1-27 On the bottom of the motherboard, you can
see bus lines terminating at the CPU socket
Courtesy: Course Technology/Cengage Learning

34
Motherboard Components Used For
Communication Among Devices
(cont’d.)
• Binary data corresponds to voltage on the line
– Voltage, lack of voltage interpreted as binary digits
• Data bus sizes today
– 16, 32, 64, 128, 256 bits wide
– Some use error checking bit

Figure 1-28 A data bus has traces or lines that carry voltage interpreted by the CPU
and other devices as bits Courtesy: Course Technology/Cengage Learning
35
Motherboard Components Used For
Communication Among Devices
(cont’d.)
• Data path size
– Width of a data bus
• Motherboard can have more than one bus
– Main motherboard bus
• Communicates with CPU, memory, chipset
• Also called system bus, front side bus (FSB), memory
bus, host bus, local bus, external bus
• System clock
– Dedicated to timing motherboard chip activities
– Quartz crystal generates oscillation

36
Figure 1-29 The system clock is a pulsating electrical signal sent out by this
component that works much like a crystal in a wristwatch (one line, or circuit, on
the motherboard bus is dedicated to carrying this pulse)
Courtesy: Course Technology/Cengage Learning

37
Motherboard Components Used For
Communication Among Devices
(cont’d.)
• Devices work according to beats (or cycles)
• Clock speed measured in hertz (cycles/second)
– One megahertz (MHz): one million cycles per second
– One gigahertz (GHz): one billion cycles per second
• Common ratings for motherboard buses
– 2600 MHz, 2000 MHz, 1600 MHz, 1333 MHz, 1066
MHz, 800 MHz, 533 MHz, or 400 MHz
• Range of CPU speeds: 166 MHz to 4 GHz
• Buses for expansion slots: PCI, AGP, ISA

38
Figure 1-30 The lines of a bus terminate at an expansion slot where they
connect to pins that connect to lines on the expansion card inserted in the
slot
Courtesy: Course Technology/Cengage Learning

39
Figure 1-31 The one AGP slot used for a video card is set farther from
the edge of the board than the PCI slots
Courtesy: Course Technology/Cengage Learning

40
Expansion Cards

• Some names for circuits mounted in expansion slots


– Circuit cards, adapter boards, expansion cards, cards
• Cards that connect the CPU to an external device
– Video: provides a port for the monitor
– Sound: provides ports for speakers and microphones
– Network: provides a port for a network cable
– Modem: provides ports for phone lines
• Determine a card’s function by identifying its port

41
Figure 1-32 This adapter card is a modem card and is
mounted in a PCI slot on the motherboard
Courtesy: Course Technology/Cengage Learning

42
Figure 1-34 The easiest way to identify this video card is to look at the ports on the
end of the card
Courtesy: Course Technology/Cengage Learning

43
The Electrical System

• Power supply
– Most important electrical component
– Converts AC voltage external source to DC voltage
– Reduces voltage from 110-120 volts to 12 volts or less
– Runs a fan to cool the inside of the computer case
• Temperatures > 185° F can cause component failure
• Motherboard has 1 or 2 connections to power supply

44
Figure 1-36 The motherboard receives its power
from the power supply by way of a 20 or 24-pin
connector called the P1 connector
Courtesy: Course Technology/Cengage
Learning

45
Instructions Stored on the Motherboard
and Other Boards
• BIOS (basic input/output system)
– Data and instructions stored on ROM chips
– ROM BIOS chips: type of firmware
• Three purposes served by motherboard ROM BIOS
– System BIOS: manages simple devices
– Startup BIOS: starts the computer
– CMOS setup: changes motherboard settings
• CMOS RAM: includes date, time, port configurations
• Flash ROM
– ROM chips that can be overwritten
46
Figure 1-37 This firmware chip contains flash ROM and CMOS RAM; CMOS
RAM is powered by the coin battery located near the chip
Courtesy: Course Technology/Cengage Learning

47

You might also like