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COMPUTER HARDWARE TECHNOLOGY GUIDE ONE
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TECHNOLOGY GUIDE OUTLINE TG1.1 Introduction TG1.2 Strategic Hardware Issues TG1.3 Innovations in Hardware Utilization TG1.4 Computer Hierarchy TG1.5 Input and Output Technologies TG1.6 The Central Processing Unit TG1.7 Computer Memory
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LEARNING OBJECTIVES Identify the major hardware components of a computer system. Discuss the strategic issues that link hardware design to business strategy. Discuss the innovations in hardware utilization. Describe the hierarchy of computers according to power and their respective roles.
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LEARNING OBJECTIVES (CONTINUED) Differentiate the various types of input and output technologies and their uses. Describe the design and functioning of the central processing unit. Discuss the relationships between microprocessor component designs and performance.
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LEARNING OBJECTIVES (CONTINUED) Describe the main types of primary and secondary storage. Distinguish between primary and secondary storage along the dimensions of speed, cost, and capacity. Define enterprise storage, and describe the various types of enterprise storage.
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HARDWARE CONSISTS OF: Central processing unit (CPU) – think of a chef in a kitchen Primary storage – think of the counter space in the kitchen Secondary storage – think about storage in the cupboard Input technologies Output technologies Communication technologies
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TG1.2 STRATEGIC HARDWARE ISSUES How do organizations keep up with the rapid price and performance advancements in hardware? How often should an organization upgrade its computers and storage systems? Will upgrades increase personal and organizational productivity? How can organizations measure such increase? How do organizations manage telecommuting?
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TG1.3 INNOVATIONS IN HARDWARE UTILIZATION (NOT SO IMPORTANT) Server Farms Virtualization Grid computing Utility computing Cloud computing Edge Computing Autonomic Computing Nanotechnology
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TG1.4 COMPUTER HIERARCHY Supercomputers Mainframe Computers Midrange Computers Workstations Notebooks and Desktop Computers Ultra-mobile PCs Computing devices
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TG1.5 INPUT AND OUTPUT TECHNOLOGIES Input technologies Human data-entry Source-data automation
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OUTPUT TECHNOLOGIES Output Monitors Printers Plotters Voice
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MULTIMEDIA TECHNOLOGY Multimedia technology Merges capabilities
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TG1.6 THE CENTRAL PROCESSING UNIT Central processing unit Central processing unit (CPU) Microprocessor – Control unit – Arithmetic-logic unit (ALU) – Registers
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HOW THE CPU WORKS Binary form Machine instruction cycle Clock speed Word length Bus width Line width
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ADVANCES IN MICROPROCESSOR DESIGN Moore’s Law YearsPower 1½2 34 4½8 616 7½32 964 10½125 12256 13½512 151024
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TG1.7 COMPUTER MEMORY Two basic categories of computer memory: Primary Storage Secondary Storage
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MEMORY CAPACITY Bit Byte
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HIERARCHY OF MEMORY CAPACITY Kilobyte – 1,000 (thousand) Megabyte – 1,000,000 (million) Gigabyte – 1,000,000,000 (billion) Terabyte – 1,000,000,000,000 (trillion) Petabyte – 1,000,000,000,000,000 Exabyte – 1,000,000,000,000,000,000 Zettabyte – 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000
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What's a Google? " Googol " is the mathematical term for a 1 followed by 100 zeros. The term was coined by Milton Sirotta, nephew of American mathematician Edward Kasner, and was popularized in the book, "Mathematics and the Imagination" by Kasner and James Newman. Google's play on the term reflects the company's mission to organize the immense amount of information available on the web.
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PRIMARY STORAGE Primary storage or main memory
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MAIN TYPES OF PRIMARY STORAGE Registers (fastest primary storage) Random access memory (RAM) Cache memory Read-only memory (ROM) (slowest primary storage)
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SECONDARY STORAGE Secondary Storage – Magnetic tape (sequential access) slow – Magnetic disks (direct access) faster About Capacity Compact Disk, Read-Only Memory (CD-ROM) Digital Video Disk (DVD)
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FLASH MEMORY DEVICES Flash memory Flash memory devices Thumb drive
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ENTERPRISE STORAGE SYSTEMS Enterprise storage system Redundant Arrays of Independent Disks (RAID) Storage Area Network (SAN) Network Attached Storage (NAS)
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