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c hapte r 16
Computer System
 Organisation
INPUT OUTPUT AND MEMORY
          DEVICES
 INPUT DEVICES
 – KEY BOARD
 – MOUSE
 – JOYSTICK
   PRINTERS
   SPEAKERS
PRINTERS
IMPACT PRINTERS
– THERE IS MECHANICAL CONTACT
  BETWEEN THE PRINT HEAD AND PAPER
NON IMPACT PRINTERS
– THERE IS NO MECHANICAL CONTACT
  BETWEEN THE PRINT HEAD AND PAPER,
  PRINTING WILL TAKE PLACE AS
  DIFFERENT WAYS
IMPACT PRINTERS EXAMPLE
1. LINE PRINTERS
 – DRUM PRINTER
    CONSIST OF CYLINDRICAL DRUM ON
    WHICH CHARACTERS ARE EMBOSSED


 – CHAIN PRINTER
    CONSISTS OF A STEEL BAND ON WHICH ON
    WHICH THE CHARACTERS ARE EMBOSSED
DRUM PRINTERS
CHAIN PRINTERS
2. CHARACTER
PRINTERS(SERIAL PRINTER)
– CHARACTER PRINTER PRINTS ONE
  CHARACTER AT A TIME, WITH THE
  PRINT HEAD MOVING ACROSS A LINE,
  NORMALLY PRINT 30 TO 300
  CHARACTERS PER SECOND..
– THERE ARE TWO TYPES
DOT MATRIX PRINTERS
– Printing haead contains a vertical group
  (array) of pins.
– There are 9 pins in the print head,
  bottom 2 used to lower case, others for
Dot matrix printers
LETTER QUALITY PRINTERS
– This type of printer will print full
  characters not as the character made of
  dots.
This lesson includes the following sections:
      • Overview of Printers
      • Dot Matrix Printers
      • Ink Jet Printers
      • Laser Printers
      • Snapshot Printers
      • Other High-Quality Printers
Overview of Printers
•   Categorizing Printers

•   Evaluating Printers
Overview of Printers - Categorizing Printers
Printers fall into two categories:

• Impact printers use a device to strike an inked
  ribbon, pressing ink from the ribbon onto the paper.

• Non-impact printers use different methods to place
  ink (or another substance) on the page.
Overview of Printers - Evaluating Printers

When evaluating printers, consider four criteria:

•   Image quality – Measured in dots per inch (dpi). Most
    printers produce 300 – 600 dpi.
•   Speed – Measured in pages per minute (ppm) or
    characters per second (cps).
•   Initial cost – Consumer printers cost $250 or less, but
    professional printers can cost thousands of dollars.
•   Cost of operation – This refers to the cost of supplies
    used by the printer.
Dot Matrix Printers

•   How Do Dot Matrix Printers Work?

•   Performance
Dot Matrix Printers -
How Do Dot Matrix Printers Work?

•   Dot matrix printers are a common type of impact
    printer.

•   A dot matrix printer's print head contains a cluster
    of pins. The printer can push the pins out to form
    patterns in rapid sequence.

•   The pins press an inked ribbon against the paper,
    creating an image.
Dot Matrix Printers - Performance

• Lower-resolution dot matrix printers use nine pins.
  Higher-resolution models have 24 pins.

• Speed is measured in characters per second (cps).
  Some dot matrix printers print 500 cps.
Ink Jet Printers

• How Do Ink Jet Printers Work?

• Performance
Ink Jet Printers –
How Do Ink Jet Printers Work?

• Ink jet printers are an example of non-impact
  printers.

• The printer sprays tiny droplets of ink onto the
  paper.

• Ink jet printers are available for color and black-and-
  white printing.
Ink Jet Printers - Performance

• Ink jet printers offer speeds of (2 – 4 pages per
  minute ppm) and resolution (300 – 600 dots per
  inch dpi), comparable to low-end laser printers.

• Ink jet printers are inexpensive and have low
  operating costs.
Laser Printers

•   How Do Laser Printers Work?

•   Performance
Laser Printers –
How Do Laser Printers Work?

•   Laser printers are non-impact printers.

•   They use heat and pressure to bond particles of
    toner to paper.

•   Laser printers are available for color and black-
    and-white printing.
Laser Printers - Performance
• Laser printers provide resolutions from 300 – 1200
  dpi and higher.

• Black-and-white laser printers usually produce 4 –
  16 ppm.

• Laser printers produce higher-quality print than
  ink jet printers, but are more expensive.
Snapshot Printers

•   Snapshot printers are specialized, small-format
    printers that print digital photographs.

•   Snapshot printers are fairly slow, and can be more
    expensive to operate
Snapshot printers are popular among
       digital camera users
Other High-Quality Printers
Print shops and publishers use these printers to create
high-quality color images:

•   Thermal-wax

•   Dye-sublimation

•   Fiery

•   IRIS

•   Plotters
Plotters use mechanical, ink jet, or thermal technology
to create large-format images for architectural or
engineering uses.
Re vie w
    •   List the three most commonly used types of printers.

    •   List the four criteria you should consider when
        evaluating printers.

    •   Describe how a dot matrix printer creates an image
        on a page.

    •   Explain the process by which a laser printer
        operates.

    •   List five types of high-quality printing devices
        commonly used in business.
   AN ESSENTIAL COMPONENT OF EVERY COMPUTER IS ITS
    MEMORY
   EACH AND EVERY WORD IS ASSIGNED AN ADDRESS IN THE
    MEMORY.
   EACH WORD CONSISTS OF SAME BITS IS CALLED WORD LENGTH.
   MEMORIES CAN BE READ FROM OR WRITTEN INTO
   MEMORIES THAT CAN BE BOTH READ FROM AND WRITTEN INTO
    ARE CALLED READ-WRITE MOMORIES.
   SOME MEMORIES HAVE PROGRAM OR DATA PERMANENTLY
    STORED AND ARE CALLED READ ONLY MEMORY.
   THERE ARE TWO TYPES OF MEMORY DEVICE
       PRIMARY MEMORY (RAM, ROM)
       SECONDARY MEMORY (HARD DISK, FLOPPY, CD, PEN DRIVE)
   THERE ARE TWO TYPES OF RAM
       DYNAMIC RAM (DRAM)
       STATIC RAM(SRAM)
   DRAM CONSISTS OF A TRANSISTOR AND CAPACITOR.
   CAPACITOR THAT’S CAPABLE OF STORING AN ELECTRIC
    CHARGE DEPENDING ON THE SWITCHING ACTION OF THE
    TRANSISTOR.
   CAPACITOR EITHER CONTAIN NO CHARGE (0 BIT) OR DOES
    HOLD A CHARGE (1BIT)
   DRAM PROVIDES VOLATILE STORAGE IT MEANS IF POWER
    FAILURE MEANS IT WILL LOST ITS MEMORY
   DRAM CONTAINS TWO ELEMENTS
       MOSFET (METAL OXIDE SEMICONDUCTOR
        FIELD EFFECT TRANSISTOR)
       CAPACITOR
       EACH CHIP WILL HAVE THE STORAGE
        CAPACITY OF 64 BIT.
   THE AMOUNT OF TIME TAKEN TO
    PRODUCE DATA REQUIRED FROM
    MEMORY, FROM THE START OF ACCESS
    UNTIL THE AVAILABLILITY OF DATA IS
    CALLED MEMORY ACCESS TIME.
   DRAM CHIPS HAVE ACCESS TIME
    RANGING FROM BELOW 7 TO 70
    NANOSECONDS.
   DRAM CELL CONSISTS OF ONLY ONE
    TRANSISTOR AND CAPACITOR PER BIT
   GENERALLY DRAM CHIPS ARE
    AVAILABLE WITH 128 BIT OR 256 BIT
    DENSITIES OR MORE
   THE PROBLEM OF CAPACITOR IS THAT IT
    STARTS LOSING THE CHARGE OVER A
    PERIOD OF TIME
   THEREFORE THE MEMORY CONTROLLER
    NEEDS TO REFRESH THE MEMORY
    CONTENTS AS MANY AS THOUSAND
    TIMES A SECOND, WHICH IS CALLED
    MEMORY REFRESHING.
   EDO DRAM
   Extended Data Out Dynamic Random Access
    Memory, a type of DRAM that is faster than
    conventional DRAM. Unlike conventional
    DRAM which can only access one block of data
    at a time, EDO RAM can start fetching the next
    block of memory at the same time that it sends
    the previous block to the CPU.
   It has a dual pipeline architecture
   BECAUSE OF NUMBER OF WIRES IN A SINGLE
    CABLE(MULTIPLEXING) , EDO DRAM CHIPS CANNOT
    OPERATE IN LOCK AND STEP INTO THEIR HOST
    MICROPROCESSORS.
   THIS IS CALLED ASYNCHRONOUS MEMORY
    PERFORMANCES
   THIS WILL KEEP THE MEMORY BUS SPEED LIMITED TO
    66MHz.
   TO REDUCE THIS PROBLEM, IT WAS MADE POSSIBLE BY
    REDESIGNING THE BASIC MEMORY CHIP INTERFACE
    CALLED SYNCHRONISED DRAM
   RAMBUS DRAM
   DOUBLE DATA RATE (DDR) SDRAM
   THIS RAM IS FAIRLY FAST, AND IT WIL TRIED TO ADDRESS
    SOME OF THE COMPLEX ELECTRICAL AND PHYSICAL
    PROBLEMS INVOLVED WITH MEMORY.
   RDRAM IS NOT MULTIPLEXING, RATHER THAN IT
    CREATES INDEPENDENT CONTROL.
   SDRAM WIL SUPPORTS ONE OPERATION IN EACH CLOCK
    CYCLE,
   BUT DDR SDRAM CAN DO TWO OPERATION PER CLOCK
    CYCLE
   SO THAT IT HAS DOUBLING THE MEMORY BANDWITDTH
   IT IS ALSO A VOLATILE BUT AS LONG AS
    THEY ARE SUPPLIED WITH POWER.
   THAT MEANS IF POWER GOES MEANS IT
    WILL STORE THE BINARY FORMAT OF
    CONTENTS, IT WILL REMAINS TO THE
    SYSTEM WHEN POWER IS APPLIED TO THE
    SYSTEM.

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Chapter16

  • 1. c hapte r 16 Computer System Organisation
  • 2. INPUT OUTPUT AND MEMORY DEVICES  INPUT DEVICES – KEY BOARD – MOUSE – JOYSTICK
  • 3. PRINTERS  SPEAKERS
  • 4. PRINTERS IMPACT PRINTERS – THERE IS MECHANICAL CONTACT BETWEEN THE PRINT HEAD AND PAPER NON IMPACT PRINTERS – THERE IS NO MECHANICAL CONTACT BETWEEN THE PRINT HEAD AND PAPER, PRINTING WILL TAKE PLACE AS DIFFERENT WAYS
  • 5. IMPACT PRINTERS EXAMPLE 1. LINE PRINTERS – DRUM PRINTER CONSIST OF CYLINDRICAL DRUM ON WHICH CHARACTERS ARE EMBOSSED – CHAIN PRINTER CONSISTS OF A STEEL BAND ON WHICH ON WHICH THE CHARACTERS ARE EMBOSSED
  • 8. 2. CHARACTER PRINTERS(SERIAL PRINTER) – CHARACTER PRINTER PRINTS ONE CHARACTER AT A TIME, WITH THE PRINT HEAD MOVING ACROSS A LINE, NORMALLY PRINT 30 TO 300 CHARACTERS PER SECOND.. – THERE ARE TWO TYPES DOT MATRIX PRINTERS – Printing haead contains a vertical group (array) of pins. – There are 9 pins in the print head, bottom 2 used to lower case, others for
  • 10. LETTER QUALITY PRINTERS – This type of printer will print full characters not as the character made of dots.
  • 11. This lesson includes the following sections: • Overview of Printers • Dot Matrix Printers • Ink Jet Printers • Laser Printers • Snapshot Printers • Other High-Quality Printers
  • 12. Overview of Printers • Categorizing Printers • Evaluating Printers
  • 13. Overview of Printers - Categorizing Printers Printers fall into two categories: • Impact printers use a device to strike an inked ribbon, pressing ink from the ribbon onto the paper. • Non-impact printers use different methods to place ink (or another substance) on the page.
  • 14. Overview of Printers - Evaluating Printers When evaluating printers, consider four criteria: • Image quality – Measured in dots per inch (dpi). Most printers produce 300 – 600 dpi. • Speed – Measured in pages per minute (ppm) or characters per second (cps). • Initial cost – Consumer printers cost $250 or less, but professional printers can cost thousands of dollars. • Cost of operation – This refers to the cost of supplies used by the printer.
  • 15. Dot Matrix Printers • How Do Dot Matrix Printers Work? • Performance
  • 16. Dot Matrix Printers - How Do Dot Matrix Printers Work? • Dot matrix printers are a common type of impact printer. • A dot matrix printer's print head contains a cluster of pins. The printer can push the pins out to form patterns in rapid sequence. • The pins press an inked ribbon against the paper, creating an image.
  • 17.
  • 18. Dot Matrix Printers - Performance • Lower-resolution dot matrix printers use nine pins. Higher-resolution models have 24 pins. • Speed is measured in characters per second (cps). Some dot matrix printers print 500 cps.
  • 19. Ink Jet Printers • How Do Ink Jet Printers Work? • Performance
  • 20. Ink Jet Printers – How Do Ink Jet Printers Work? • Ink jet printers are an example of non-impact printers. • The printer sprays tiny droplets of ink onto the paper. • Ink jet printers are available for color and black-and- white printing.
  • 21.
  • 22. Ink Jet Printers - Performance • Ink jet printers offer speeds of (2 – 4 pages per minute ppm) and resolution (300 – 600 dots per inch dpi), comparable to low-end laser printers. • Ink jet printers are inexpensive and have low operating costs.
  • 23. Laser Printers • How Do Laser Printers Work? • Performance
  • 24.
  • 25. Laser Printers – How Do Laser Printers Work? • Laser printers are non-impact printers. • They use heat and pressure to bond particles of toner to paper. • Laser printers are available for color and black- and-white printing.
  • 26.
  • 27. Laser Printers - Performance • Laser printers provide resolutions from 300 – 1200 dpi and higher. • Black-and-white laser printers usually produce 4 – 16 ppm. • Laser printers produce higher-quality print than ink jet printers, but are more expensive.
  • 28. Snapshot Printers • Snapshot printers are specialized, small-format printers that print digital photographs. • Snapshot printers are fairly slow, and can be more expensive to operate
  • 29. Snapshot printers are popular among digital camera users
  • 30. Other High-Quality Printers Print shops and publishers use these printers to create high-quality color images: • Thermal-wax • Dye-sublimation • Fiery • IRIS • Plotters
  • 31. Plotters use mechanical, ink jet, or thermal technology to create large-format images for architectural or engineering uses.
  • 32. Re vie w • List the three most commonly used types of printers. • List the four criteria you should consider when   evaluating printers. • Describe how a dot matrix printer creates an image on a page. • Explain the process by which a laser printer operates. • List five types of high-quality printing devices commonly used in business.
  • 33. AN ESSENTIAL COMPONENT OF EVERY COMPUTER IS ITS MEMORY  EACH AND EVERY WORD IS ASSIGNED AN ADDRESS IN THE MEMORY.  EACH WORD CONSISTS OF SAME BITS IS CALLED WORD LENGTH.  MEMORIES CAN BE READ FROM OR WRITTEN INTO  MEMORIES THAT CAN BE BOTH READ FROM AND WRITTEN INTO ARE CALLED READ-WRITE MOMORIES.  SOME MEMORIES HAVE PROGRAM OR DATA PERMANENTLY STORED AND ARE CALLED READ ONLY MEMORY.  THERE ARE TWO TYPES OF MEMORY DEVICE  PRIMARY MEMORY (RAM, ROM)  SECONDARY MEMORY (HARD DISK, FLOPPY, CD, PEN DRIVE)
  • 34. THERE ARE TWO TYPES OF RAM  DYNAMIC RAM (DRAM)  STATIC RAM(SRAM)
  • 35. DRAM CONSISTS OF A TRANSISTOR AND CAPACITOR.  CAPACITOR THAT’S CAPABLE OF STORING AN ELECTRIC CHARGE DEPENDING ON THE SWITCHING ACTION OF THE TRANSISTOR.  CAPACITOR EITHER CONTAIN NO CHARGE (0 BIT) OR DOES HOLD A CHARGE (1BIT)  DRAM PROVIDES VOLATILE STORAGE IT MEANS IF POWER FAILURE MEANS IT WILL LOST ITS MEMORY
  • 36. DRAM CONTAINS TWO ELEMENTS  MOSFET (METAL OXIDE SEMICONDUCTOR FIELD EFFECT TRANSISTOR)  CAPACITOR  EACH CHIP WILL HAVE THE STORAGE CAPACITY OF 64 BIT.
  • 37. THE AMOUNT OF TIME TAKEN TO PRODUCE DATA REQUIRED FROM MEMORY, FROM THE START OF ACCESS UNTIL THE AVAILABLILITY OF DATA IS CALLED MEMORY ACCESS TIME.  DRAM CHIPS HAVE ACCESS TIME RANGING FROM BELOW 7 TO 70 NANOSECONDS.
  • 38. DRAM CELL CONSISTS OF ONLY ONE TRANSISTOR AND CAPACITOR PER BIT  GENERALLY DRAM CHIPS ARE AVAILABLE WITH 128 BIT OR 256 BIT DENSITIES OR MORE
  • 39. THE PROBLEM OF CAPACITOR IS THAT IT STARTS LOSING THE CHARGE OVER A PERIOD OF TIME  THEREFORE THE MEMORY CONTROLLER NEEDS TO REFRESH THE MEMORY CONTENTS AS MANY AS THOUSAND TIMES A SECOND, WHICH IS CALLED MEMORY REFRESHING.
  • 40. EDO DRAM  Extended Data Out Dynamic Random Access Memory, a type of DRAM that is faster than conventional DRAM. Unlike conventional DRAM which can only access one block of data at a time, EDO RAM can start fetching the next block of memory at the same time that it sends the previous block to the CPU.  It has a dual pipeline architecture
  • 41.
  • 42. BECAUSE OF NUMBER OF WIRES IN A SINGLE CABLE(MULTIPLEXING) , EDO DRAM CHIPS CANNOT OPERATE IN LOCK AND STEP INTO THEIR HOST MICROPROCESSORS.  THIS IS CALLED ASYNCHRONOUS MEMORY PERFORMANCES  THIS WILL KEEP THE MEMORY BUS SPEED LIMITED TO 66MHz.  TO REDUCE THIS PROBLEM, IT WAS MADE POSSIBLE BY REDESIGNING THE BASIC MEMORY CHIP INTERFACE CALLED SYNCHRONISED DRAM  RAMBUS DRAM  DOUBLE DATA RATE (DDR) SDRAM
  • 43.
  • 44. THIS RAM IS FAIRLY FAST, AND IT WIL TRIED TO ADDRESS SOME OF THE COMPLEX ELECTRICAL AND PHYSICAL PROBLEMS INVOLVED WITH MEMORY.  RDRAM IS NOT MULTIPLEXING, RATHER THAN IT CREATES INDEPENDENT CONTROL.
  • 45. SDRAM WIL SUPPORTS ONE OPERATION IN EACH CLOCK CYCLE,  BUT DDR SDRAM CAN DO TWO OPERATION PER CLOCK CYCLE  SO THAT IT HAS DOUBLING THE MEMORY BANDWITDTH
  • 46. IT IS ALSO A VOLATILE BUT AS LONG AS THEY ARE SUPPLIED WITH POWER.  THAT MEANS IF POWER GOES MEANS IT WILL STORE THE BINARY FORMAT OF CONTENTS, IT WILL REMAINS TO THE SYSTEM WHEN POWER IS APPLIED TO THE SYSTEM.