Hardware - What Makes
Computers Go?
by
Andy Rush
There
are two basic categories of computer components:
What goes inside the computer Case,
and what is outside the case; the Peripherals.
In the picture to the left, you see a computer
case (back left) with all of it's peripherals:
monitor (with the blue screen);
speakers on each side; a mouse
(that's a computer mouse in front of the left
speaker); and a keyboard (in
front of the monitor).
What's Inside
Let's start with what's
in the case first. The computer needs power
to work so you need a Power Supply.
The Power
Supply takes the electricity from the wall and
distributes it throughout the computer. It basically
is a metal rectangular box with multiple wires
coming from it. Power is provided, first and
foremost, to the Motherboard
(left) and the CPU. The motherboard
is the framework of circuits and connections
to the components of the computer. The CPU,
or central processing unit sits in a socket
on the motherboard. Currently Pentium IV chips
of up to 2800MHz or 2.8GHz (!) are being used.
The CPU does most of the "thinking"
for the computer and the information travels
over the circuits of the motherboard. Data is
moved back and forth from the CPU to the other
internal and external components of the computer.
There is lots of data
moving within the computer, and in order to
handle it all the computer needs some
microchips with some data storage capabilities.
These chips will only contain data while the
computer is powered on. They are known as RAM
chips. RAM stands for random access memory and
any software programs that you are using for
a particular computing session are maintained
in these chips. While you use the software,
data will be updated on the Display
(more about displays later). When you stop using
the software, the memory that the program was
using gets flushed out.
Obviously
if this RAM is only good while the computer
is on, we need to have some other storage areas
that will keep the information even when the
computer is off. Enter the Disks!
As in Hard Disks and Floppy
Disks. These disks have data placed
on them and removed from them while the computer
is on, and they keep it safe (or reasonably
safe) when the computer is off. The disks work
very much like an audio tape. You record some
music to the tape and you can play it back over
and over. Well the same goes for the data on
your disks. You record (or "write")
data to the disk, and you can retrieve it ("read"
it) as many times as you want. Hard disks have
a much greater capacity than floppy disks. The
highest capacity consumer hadr disks hold 160
Gigabytes of data.
That's well over 100,000 times the data that
a single floppy disk can contain. However, hard
disks have one drawback that floppy disks don't
have. They aren't removable (at least not very
easily). Hard disks are what is known as fixed
media. Floppy disks are known as removable
media. Floppy disks can hold roughly
1,000 pages of text on a disk. Also, since they
are portable they can transport several documents
from one computer to the next. Yeah, hard disks
hold much more, but they are going to stay put.
In
between floppy disks and hard disks are CD-ROMs,
CD-RWs, and Zip disks.
CD-ROM stands for compact disk - read only memory.
What that means is that they are very much like
the CDs that play music, but they have computer
data on them. In addition you can only retrieve
data from them. They are "read only",
no writing (recording) data to them. CD-ROMs
hold about 600,000 pages of text. CD-RWs on
the other hand are rewriteable, meaning you
can record data on these special CDs over and
over again. Zip disks are much like floppy disks,
but have a capacity of either 100, 250 or 750
megabytes. That means they can hold a minimum
of 100,000 pages
of text and can be read from and written to.
You need a special Zip drive installed
in your machine to read these disks. Just like
you need a CD-ROM drive to read CD-ROMs, and
a floppy disk drive to read floppy disks, you
need a Zip drive to read Zip disks. A hard disk
drive is a self-contained unit that houses the
media. Hard disk drives, as well as floppy disk
and CD-ROM drives are pretty standard on most
machines now. Zip disks drives are showing up
more as a popular option.
Remember,
all that memory and media holds data and software
that make your computer
a usable device. However, all that media and
memory don't mean anything if you don't have
some device to allow you to interact with the
computer. In order to use the software on a
computer, you need things like a Keyboard
to type words and commands, and you need a Mouse
to move the arrow that points to the icons that
represent the computer components and software
applications. We'll talk about the mouse and
keyboard in a future section on peripherals.
The
last couple of items we should mention that
are found inside the case of the computer are
several different types of ports,
and the expansion slots. The
Serial Port and the Parallel
Port are found on the back of the computer.
The serial port is also known as a communication
port. It allows devices such as modems to be
connected externally to the computer. The parallel
port is also known as the printer port. Printers
get connected here. However, those ports are
falling out of favor, and new types of ports,
called USB, are now a standard
on new computers. USB ports are high speed serial
ports that newer modems, printers, scanners,
speakers, monitors, and other devices can connect
to.
Expansion
slots allow other devices not on the
motherboard to be connected. For example, a
video display card, sound card,
or a network interface card
would be inserted into the expansion slots to,
connect to a display monitor, give you sound
for your computer, or connect to a high speed
network, respectively. Some computers, however,
have these devices built into the motherboard,
which in turn can make the computer smaller.
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