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Chapter 11 Multimedia Devices and Mass Storage
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You Will Learn… About multimedia devices such as sound cards, digital cameras, and MP3 players About optical storage technologies such as CD and DVD About tape drives and removable drives How certain hardware devices are used for backup and fault tolerance How to troubleshoot multimedia and mass storage devices
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Multimedia on a PC Goal To create or reproduce lifelike representations of sight and sound Challenge Data storage is digital Sights and sounds are analog
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CPU Technologies for Multimedia MMX, SSE, and 3DNow! Improve speed of processing graphics, video, and sound Use improved methods of handling high-volume repetition during I/O operations Software must be written to use the specific capabilities
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Multimedia Devices Sound cards Digital cameras MP3 players Video capture cards
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Sound Cards Record sound, save it to a file on hard drive, play it back Have ports for external stereo speakers and microphone input May be SoundBlaster compatible
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Stages of Computerized Sound Digitize or input the sound (analog to digital) Includes sampling Data is measured at a series of representative points Sampling rate = cycles per second, or hertz (Hz) Store digital data in a compressed data file Reproduce or synthesize the sound (digital to analog)
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Sound Card Manufacturers
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Installing a Sound Card Physically install the card in an empty PCI slot on the motherboard Install the sound card driver Install the sound application software
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Installing a Sound Card
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Installing the Sound Card Driver
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Digital Cameras Use light sensors to detect light and convert it to a digital signal stored in an image file using JPEG format Use TWAIN format for transferring images Camera’s image-editing software (or another program) can be used to view, touch up, and print the picture
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Digital Cameras
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Digital Camera Manufacturers
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MP3 Players Store and play MP3 files downloaded from a PC, using internal memory and flash storage devices
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Compression Methods Used with MP3 Players MPEG (Moving Pictures Experts Group) standard Tracks movement from one frame to the next and stores only what changes Cuts out or drastically reduces sound that is not normally heard by the human ear
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MPEG Standards MPEG-1 Used in business and home applications to compress images MPEG-2 Used to compress video films on DVD-ROM MPEG-3 Used for audio compression MPEG-4 Used for video transmissions over the Internet
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How MP3 Players Work Play MP3 files downloaded from a PC, using internal memory and flash storage devices (eg, SmartMedia, CompactFlash, or Memory Stick)
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MP3 Player Manufacturers
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Video Capture Card Allows you to capture input from a camcorder or directly from TV
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Features to Look for on a Video Capture Card IEEE 1394 (FireWire) port to interface with a digital camcorder Data transfer rates, which affect price Capture resolution and color-depth capabilities Ability to transfer data back to digital camcorder or VCR Stereo audio jacks Video-editing software bundled with the card
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Optical Storage Technology Patterns of tiny pits on disc surface represent bits, which are read by a laser beam Major optical storage technologies CD-ROM drives Use CDFS (Compact Disc File System) or UDF (Universal Disk Format) DVD drives Use only UDF
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CD-ROM Data physically embedded into disc surface Surface laid out as one continuous spiral of sectors of equal length that hold equal amounts of data in pits and lands
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CD-ROM Read-only Slower to access than hard drives Used to distribute software and sound files Combines constant linear velocity (CLV) and constant angular velocity (CAV) Look for multisession feature
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CD-ROM Drive Manufacturers
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CD-ROMs Caring for CD-ROM drives and discs Use precautions when handling CD-ROM drive interface with motherboard IDE interface (most common) SCSI interface with SCSI host adapter Proprietary expansion card that works only with CD-ROMs from a particular manufacturer Proprietary connection on sound card Portable drive; plug into external port on PC
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Installing a CD-ROM Drive
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Accessing CD-ROM Drive When Booting from a Floppy Disk Windows rescue disk needs to include tools to access CD-ROM drive in the event of hard drive failure There will be no access to 32-bit Windows CD-ROM drivers on the hard drive Files required to access a CD-ROM drive while in real mode: 16-bit device driver provided by manufacturer of CD-ROM drive; loaded from Config.sys 16-bit real-mode OS interface to the driver, Mscdex.exe; loaded from Autoexec.bat
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CD-R (CD-Recordable) Drives and Discs Enables “burning” your own CDs Used for distributing software or large amounts of data Cannot edit or overwrite Allow for a lot of data storage on a relatively inexpensive medium Bottom of disk is tinted (eg, blue, black); CDs are silver Can be read by all CD-ROM drives
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CD-RW (CD-Rewritable) Drives and Discs Allows overwriting old data with new data Cannot always be read by older drives More expensive than CD-R discs
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DVD (Digital Video Disc) Storage capacity 8.5 GB (one side) 17 GB (both sides) Uses Universal Disk Format (UDF) file system Uses shorter wavelength laser than CD; a second opaque layer also holds data Uses MPEG-2 video compression; requires MPEG-2 controller to decode compressed data Audio is stored in Dolby AC-3 compression
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DVD Device
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DVD Devices
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DVD Drive Manufacturers
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Installing a DVD Drive
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Installing a DVD Drive
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Tape Drives Advantages Inexpensive and convenient Large capacity Several types and formats Disadvantage Sequential access
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Tape Drive Manufacturers
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How a Tape Drive Interfaces with a Computer External Parallel port with optional pass-through to the printer Internal IDE ATAPI interface (most popular) External or internal SCSI bus Proprietary controller card or floppy drive interface
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External Drive Using Parallel Port
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An ATAPI IDE Tape Drive
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Tapes Used by a Tape Drive Two kinds Full-sized data cartridges Minicartridges (more popular) Standards Quarter-Inch Committee (QIC) or quarter-inch cartridge standards (not used much today) Travan by 3M (popular, improved group of standards)
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Minicartridge for a Tape Drive
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Removable Drives Can be internal or external Advantages Increase overall storage capacity of a system Make it easy to move large files from one computer to another Serve as a convenient medium for making backups of hard drive data Make it easy to secure important files
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Considerations When Purchasing a Removable Drive Drop height Half-life of the disk Plug and Play compliance
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Types of Removable Drives Iomega 3½-inch Zip drive Stores 100 MB or 250 MB of data Drop height of 8 feet SuperDisk by Imation or Maxell Stores 120 MB or 240 MB, respectively Backward compatibility with regular floppy disks Iomega Jaz drive Stores 1 GB or 2 GB of data Drop height of 3 feet
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Zip Drive Kit
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Installing a Removable Drive Internal removable drive Similar to installing a hard drive External removable drive Different process
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Troubleshooting Guidelines Do not touch chips on circuit boards or disk surfaces where data is stored Do not stack components on top of one another Do not subject them to magnetic fields or ESD
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Problems with CD-ROM or DVD Installations Computer does not recognize the drive (no drive D listed in Windows 9x Explorer) Check data cable and power cord connections For an IDE drive Is correct master/slave jumper set? Is IDE connection on motherboard disabled in CMOS setup? For SCSI, are proper IDs set? Most current drivers installed? Another device using same port settings? Suspect a boot virus
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Troubleshooting Sound Problems Problem with sound card itself Result of system settings Bad connections
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Troubleshooting Tape Drives A minicartridge does not work Data transfer is slow Drive does not work after installation Drive fails intermittently or gives errors
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Chapter Summary What multimedia devices can do, how they work, and how to support them Storage devices CD DVD Removable drives Tape drives
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