"The Computer"

A computer is a machine which manipulates data according to a list of instructions.

Computer

The computer is one of the most powerful innovations in human history. With the use of computers, people are suddenly able to perform a staggering amount of computations at dazzling speeds. Information can be crunched, organized, and displayed in the blink of an eye. As technology continues to advance, the computer will no doubt become even more pervasive — and in many cases, likely even less recognizable.

What is Computer?

A computer is a device that accepts information (in the form of digitalized data) and manipulates it for some result based on a program or sequence of instructions on how the data is to be processed. Complex computers also include the means for storing data (including the program, which is also a form of data) for some necessary duration.

Computer Components

Computer Components

Computers come in all types and sizes. There are primarily two main sizes of computers. They are:
  • Portable
  • Desktop
The portable computer comes in various sizes and are referred to as laptops, notebooks, and hand-held computers. These generally denote different sizes, the laptop being the largest, and the hand-held is the smallest size. This document will mainly talk about the desktop computer although portable computer issues are also discussed in various areas.

Computer Components:

 

Computers are made of the following basic components:
  1. Case with hardware inside:

    1. Power Supply - The power supply comes with the case, but this component is mentioned separately since there are various types of power supplies. The one you should get depends on the requirements of your system. This will be discussed in more detail later


    2. Motherboard - This is where the core components of your computer reside which are listed below. Also the support cards for video, sound, networking and more are mounted into this board.
      1. Microprocessor - This is the brain of your computer. It performs commands and instructions and controls the operation of the computer.
      2. Memory - The RAM in your system is mounted on the motherboard. This is memory that must be powered on to retain its contents.
      3. Drive controllers - The drive controllers control the interface of your system to your hard drives. The controllers let your hard drives work by controlling their operation. On most systems, they are included on the motherboard, however you may add additional controllers for faster or other types of drives.


    3. Hard disk drive(s) - This is where your files are permanently stored on your computer. Also, normally, your operating system is installed here.


    4. CD-ROM drive(s) - This is normally a read only drive where files are permanently stored. There are now read/write CD-ROM drives that use special software to allow users to read from and write to these drives.


    5. Floppy drive(s) - A floppy is a small disk storage device that today typically has about 1.4 Megabytes of memory capacity.

    6. Other possible file storage devices include DVD devices, Tape backup devices, and some others.

  2. Monitor - This device which operates like a TV set lets the user see how the computer is responding to their commands.

  3. Keyboard - This is where the user enters text commands into the computer.

  4. Mouse - A point and click interface for entering commands which works well in graphical environments.

Parts of a Computer





A computer can be defined broadly as any of a class of man-made devices or systems that can modify data in some meaningful way.



Data is a collection of distinct pieces of information, particularly information that has been formatted (i.e., organized) in some specific way for use in analysis or making decisions. Information can be broadly defined as any pattern that can be recognized by some system (e.g., a living organism, an electronic system or a mechanical device) and/or that can influence the formation or transformation of other patterns.


All computers make use of both hardware and software and utilize some form of energy. Hardware refers to the physical components of computers, both those that are directly involved in processing the data, such as the CPU (central processing unit) and memory chips, and peripheral devices, such as storage devices (e.g., hard disk drives) and devices for human-computer interface (e.g., display monitors and keyboards).


Software can be divided into two broad categories. One is data, and the other is programs, which are sequences of instructions to manipulate data. Programs, in turn, can likewise be divided into two broad categories: application programs, which users work with directly to manipulate data, and operating systems, which are collections of programs that manage all the other programs as well as the allocation and use of hardware resources.


Computers can be designed for various levels of specificity of applications, from just a single application through a class of applications to general purpose. The type of data that can be accommodated depends on the type of computer: computers designed for a specific application might only be able to accommodate one type of data, whereas general purpose computers can accommodate a wide range of data types, including text, numeric, image and audio.


General purpose computers are programmable; that is, programs can easily be entered into them, stored in them, created and modified within them, and removed from them by users. This is in contrast with some highly specific computers that contain only a single program that cannot be modified or replaced without great difficulty.


Electronic computers process data by breaking it down into the smallest practical units, which are bits (short for binary digits), and manipulating them at extremely high speed with simple arithmetic calculations such that it can seem that some sort of magic is taking place.


Although nearly all computers today perform their operations on data via electronic circuits, this was not always the case. For example, early computers were mechanical, such as the abacus, Charles Babbage's uncompleted difference engine and early calculators. Even the first electronic computers, such as the Z3, which was completed in Germany in 1941, made use of non-electronic parts (i.e., electro-mechanical relays) for their operation.


The first fully electronic computer was the Colossus, which was completed in 1944; however, it was designed only to perform a single task (i.e., code breaking) and was not programmable. The first fully electronic computer that was programmable was ENIAC (Electronic Numerical Integrator And Computer), which began test operation in late 1945.
Tremendous progress has been made on improving performance and reducing the size of cost of computers subsequent to the development of ENIAC. For example, whereas ENIAC measured some 2.4m by 0.9m by 30.5m and weighed roughly 30 metric tons, today the same amount of computational power can be accommodated on a single chip of silicon about the size of a grain of rice. Moreover, whereas ENIAC cost approximately a half million dollars just for construction (and much more when operation is included), computers with superior performance are available today for just a few cents and are even used in wristwatches and cheap toys.


The term computer originally referred to a person whose profession was spending all day at the tedious task of doing calculations with a pencil and paper. A major use for such calculations was producing trajectory tables for ballistics for the military. The desire to speed up such calculations was the driving force behind the development of ENIAC.


The term today is no longer used to refer to such human computers. Now it generally means the electronic device that does the data processing together with the peripheral hardware for input, output and storage, such as a display screen, disk drives, a keyboard and a mouse. But it can also refer to a single chip which performs the basic computer functions, referred to as a computer on a chip. Such chips can be used in conventional, general purpose computers, such as desktop or notebook computers, but their largest application is in embedded systems, which are products into which computer functions are built (e.g., aircraft, electronic medical equipment, industrial production controls, communications equipment, elevators, locomotives, and test and measurement instruments).

Parts of a computer



 

This page adds "extra" information about some of the computer parts we've studied. Click here to see the lists of definitions you need. 

A term you want not listed? Go here.









 








    Everything inside the computer is connected to a circuit board called the 'motherboard'. The motherboard has sockets for low-level programming (BIOS), the computer's brain, called a CPU; the computer's memory (RAM, ROM and CMOS); and for add-on cards to control the video (picture), audio (sound), printer and anything else that might be connected to the computer. You may also find a modem inside on an add-on card.
 


CPU: stands for 'Central Processing Unit' and is the 'brain' of the computer. Most CPU's today are made by Intel and bear such names as 'Pentium', 'Pentium Pro' and 'Pentium II'. Older Intel CPU's include the 80486 and 80386 families. Other manufacturers also make CPU's: Motorola for the Macintosh, AMD and Cirrus for PC's and others. The 'speed' of a CPU's processing is measured in megahertz. The CPU is the place that holds info about the operating system (DOS or Windows, for example).



RAM: RAM is what you know as “Memory”, as in how much memory does your computer have? It is not permanent memory - the RAM is erased when the computer turns off. Permanent memory is stored on the hard drive. Memory is measured in increments of bits and bytes. Generally the least memory you should ever have with a Pentium computer is 64 MB (megabytes: look up kilo-, mega-, and giga- for more info), and more is much better. There are places on the motherboard (called “slots”) for memory modules. The memory modules are small printed circuit boards with memory chips on them and are usually either SIMM’s (Single Inline Memory Modules) or DIMM’s (Dual Inline Memory Module).
Don't confuse this with ROM.


 

This is an add-in or expansion board such as a video card, sound card or modem. On every motherboard there are places to add circuit boards to extend the capabilities of the computer. The most common circuit boards used are the internal modem,  sound card, and the video display adapter. There are various types of expansion slots that may be on the motherboard. The ISA (Industry Standards Association) expansion slot is the older type and most of the older circuit boards used this type of slot. A more sophisticated type of slot is the PCI and the newer modems, and more sophisticated sound cards require this type of slot. The newest type slot in a PC is the AGP (Accelerated Graphics Port) slot, which is specifically designed for a video display adapter. The AGP port enables high performance graphics capabilities, especially for 3D graphics.


The video card controls what you see on the monitor. It determines how many dots across the screen and down the screen the computer can look after. The more dots, the more information or the more detail you can see. The video card also controls how many colors you can see. Most computers today can show anywhere from 256 colors to many millions of colors. The sound card controls the sound. Most computers come with pretty cheap speakers, and the sound card can probably produce much better sound than the speakers can. With good speakers, today's sound cards can make your computer sound as good as a stereo!




 The hard drive uses disks that are made of aluminum or glass (and therefore 'hard'). Each disk can store much more information than either a floppy or CD-ROM. Sometimes, there may be several disks in a hard drive. However, the disks in a normal hard drive can not be removed or replaced. Today, hard drives are measured in gigabytes. That's one thousand million bytes. 1 gigabyte is about 11/3 CD-ROM disks. Sometimes a special cache is used for quick retrieval of often-used information (such as web pages). This is just a separate directory on the hard drive.




 Generally when we talk about a floppy disk drive we are talking about the drive that uses the 3.5 inch 1.44Mb floppy disk in it. There have been other types that have  come and gone.








CD-ROM stands for Compact Disk – Read Only Memory. The original name was WORM drive, which meant Write Once Read Many. So the term CD-ROM is not really very accurate, but it is the name that has stuck.


At one time there was the PC keyboard, the AT keyboard, and the 101 key enhanced keyboard, which had F9 through F12 keys and a separate numeric keypad. Now the 101 key enhanced keyboard is the standard type and keyboards are named according to the type of connection it makes to the computer. The two common types of connectors that go from the keyboard to the computer motherboard are the AT and the PS/2.  The AT is the larger older type, and the PS/2 is a newer type and communicates better with he computer.



 A modem allows your computer to connect to another computer using the normal telephone line. It converts data from a computer format, which requires many wires, into a format that can be sent using only the two wires of a telephone line. At the other end of the telephone wires the process is reversed. Data transfer rates from the modem vary from 14.4Kbs to 56Kbs. (14.4Kbs, 28.8Kbs, 33.6Kbs, 56Kbs) There are special types of modems such as cable modems that can communicate at much higher data rates.




USB (Universal Serial Bus) connector is the newest type port (connector) on the PC. It is extremely easy to use. You just plug in a USB compatible device and the computer automatically configures itself to use the device. The computer does not have to be turned off or rebooted. As many as 127 USB peripherals can be plugged into a computer at one time. At 12Mbits per second it is more than 100 times as fast as a serial port. The next generation USB motherboards will communicate at 480Mbits per second.

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COMPUTER

Technically, a computer is a programmable machine. This means it can execute a programmed list of instructions and respond to new instructions that it is given. Today, however, the term is most often used to refer to the desktop and laptop computers that most people use. When referring to a desktop model, the term "computer" technically only refers to the computer itself -- not the monitor, keyboard, and mouse. Still, it is acceptable to refer to everything together as the computer. If you want to be really technical, the box that holds the computer is called the "system unit."

Some of the major parts of a personal computer (or PC) include the motherboard, CPU, memory (or RAM), hard drive, and video card. While personal computers are by far the most common type of computers today, there are several other types of computers. For example, a "minicomputer" is a powerful computer that can support many users at once. A "mainframe" is a large, high-powered computer that can perform billions of calculations from multiple sources at one time. Finally, a "supercomputer" is a machine that can process billions of instructions a second and is used to calculate extremely complex calculations.