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1 Essential Computing Concepts. 2 Memory Central processing unit (CPU) Input Auxiliary Storage Auxiliary Storage Auxiliary Storage Output Any Computer.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Essential Computing Concepts. 2 Memory Central processing unit (CPU) Input Auxiliary Storage Auxiliary Storage Auxiliary Storage Output Any Computer."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Essential Computing Concepts

2 2 Memory Central processing unit (CPU) Input Auxiliary Storage Auxiliary Storage Auxiliary Storage Output Any Computer System

3 3 The PC Today

4 4 Inside the PC On Off A bit or binary digit has one of two values, zero or one A byte is the smallest addressable unit of memory (8 bits) ASCII provides for 256 (or 2 8 ) characters  01000001 – A  01000010 – B  etc.

5 5 Intel trademarked its chip as the Pentium  Pentium II, Pentium III, Pentium IV  Clock speed (MHz or GHz) differentiates chips The central processing unit (cpu) or “brain” of the PC The Microprocessor

6 6 Memory Transient (erased when power turned off)  Consider a UPS (uninterrupted power supply) Measured in bytes  1 Kilobyte = 2 10 characters (~1,000 bytes)  1 Megabyte = 2 20 characters (~1,000,000 bytes)  1 Gigabyte = 2 30 characters (~1,000,000,000 bytes) Need 256Mb or 512Mb of RAM  Keep multiple programs & data files in memory  Graphic-intensive programs demand a lot of memory The Original PC had 16Kb of memory

7 7 Auxiliary Storage Floppy Disk  No longer standard Hard (fixed) disk  30 Gb and higher Removable storage  CD-ROM  CD-R/CD-RW  DVD/DVD-R/DVD-RW  Zip disks  Tape

8 8 Input Devices

9 9 The Monitor Resolution is expressed in picture elements or pixels; (800 x 600 or 1024 x 768) The higher the resolution, the more you can see at one time. Larger monitors enable you to you run at higher resolutions; e.g., 19” to run 1024 x 768 comfortably A graphics card speeds processing

10 10 Lower Resolution (800 x 600) Displays 20 rows and 8 columns

11 11 Higher Resolution (1024 x 768) Displays 28 rows and 12 columns

12 12 The Printer Ink Jet  Today’s entry level Laser  Top-of-the line Four-in-one functionality  Printer, scanner, fax, copier Network printer

13 13 Software System Software – Microsoft Windows  Windows XP Home Edition  Windows XP Professional Edition  What Windows does not have - File Compression, Antivirus, Graphical FTP Application Software – Microsoft Office  Core applications – Word, Excel, Access, and PowerPoint  Personal Information Manager – Outlook  Other applications – FrontPage and Publisher  New to Office 2003 - OneNote and InfoPath

14 14 Disk and File Management A file is a set of instructions or data  Program file: Microsoft Word or Microsoft Excel  Data File: Document or workbook Copy, move, rename or delete a file A folder allows us to organize our files  May contain files and/or other folders A back up strategy is critical  What (data), When (whenever it changes), Where (off site), How (Windows Explorer), and Who (you)

15 15 Windows Explorer Homework is the active folder - Sign indicate object is expanded Milestones in Communication is selected file

16 16 Maintaining Your System Windows update takes place automatically Double click to install a printer Double click to add new user

17 17 A computer virus is an actively infectious program that can erase data and/or alter the way your computer works Worms and Trojan horses are other types of infectious programs, but all are bad Computer viruses are spread through email, and/or infected floppy disks Windows does not include an antivirus program; i.e., you must buy it separately and update it frequently Antivirus Software

18 18 File Transfer Protocol Graphical FTP is not part of Windows Selected file to FTP Click to upload Where you will FTP the file

19 19 File Compression Use WinZip (or compatible) program to create a compressed file or archive Create a self-extracting file from the archive that does not require supporting software

20 20 Introduction to Networks Most people work in a network environment  Home network  Local Area Network (LAN)  Wide Area Network (WAN) The physical structure includes: interface cards, cables, hubs, switches, and routers Protect your password!

21 21 From LAN to WAN (a) Home Network (b) Local Area Network

22 22 From LAN to WAN (continued) (c) Wide Area Network

23 23 The Internet and World Wide Web The Internet  Network of networks  Began in 1969 as a government project  Original network had 4 computers;  No central authority and thus impossible to know the exact size The World Wide Web  A subset of the Internet consisting of computers that store hypertext documents  Invented by Tim Berners Lee who wanted to share notes with colleagues at the European Particle Physics Laboratory (CERN) in Switzerland

24 24 A message travels the Internet All that matters is the beginning and ending address

25 25 Acronyms Abound HTTP – HyperText Transfer Protocol is used to transmit Web documents HTTPS – Secure protocol for confidential transactions HTML – The language in which all Web documents are displayed TCP/IP – A suite of protocols that allows multiple platforms to communicate ISP – Internet Service Provider

26 26 The Exploring Office Web Site Web address (or URL) Internet Explorer is the browser HTTP protocol

27 27 E-Mail (Electronic Mail) E-mail is simply a means of sending messages via computer There should be no expectation of privacy Every e-mail address is unique and consists of two parts, a username and a host computer; e.g. johndoe@anyschool.edu You can obtain an account at school, pay for an account through an ISP such as AOL, or get free email accounts at sites like www.hotmail.com or www.yahoo.com

28 28 The Mail Folders Inbox – new messages as well as messages that have been read Outbox – messages not yet sent Sent items – messages that have been sent (moved here from outbox) Deleted items – messages deleted from any folder Custom folders – additional folders created by the user

29 29 Additional E-mail Capabilities Address Book  Contains the e-mail addresses of frequent contacts  Enables you to enter an alias (e.g., “Bob” instead of the complete address) Distribution List  A set of e-mail addresses stored under one name  Ideal for your professor to e-mail the class

30 30 Parts of the E-mail Message Recipients Message text Subject Attachment


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