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The Business Master (4th Edition)
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The Business Master - 4th Edition.iso
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mrdos2.txt
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1993-01-16
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---------------------------------[ HARDWARE ]---------------------------------
CENTRAL PROCESSOR UNIT (CPU)
----------------------------
Heart of the PC - it contains the microprocessor. The CPU is a set of
miniaturized circuits that does all the "thinking". It controls the
interpretation (arithmetic-logic unit) and execution (control unit) of
instructions. The CPU in conjunction with RAM comprise the computer's
"brain". The CPU does the "thinking/calculating" while RAM contains the
instructions or "memories". It is the CPU that largely determines the
operating speed of the computer.
BIT
---
Smallest unit of information recognized by the computer. BIT is short for
Binary Digit. A Binary Digit can be either a 0 or a 1. Several bits make up
a byte.
BYTE
----
A group of 8 BITS. This grouping of adjacent binary digits (bits) is operated
on by the computer as a unit. Computers use 1 BYTE to represent 1 character
such as a letter of the alphabet, a number, a punctuation mark, a
space, etc. A BYTE is also a unit of measure since it represents 1 character.
For example, when the letter "A" is pressed, the keyboard actually sends the
following to RAM: 10000001 - a set of 8 bits. See RAM, FLOPPY DISK.
RANDOM ACCESS MEMORY (RAM)
--------------------------
A set of miniaturized circuits which represents the working memory of the
computer. This is where application programs (software) can be loaded from
the outside and then executed. The larger the RAM the better. A typical
single user computer system may contain approximately 640,000 bytes of RAM.
(This is often abbreviated as 640k RAM. 1 k bytes is actually = 1024 bytes)
The RAM is emptied when the computer is turned off - thus it is often called
"volatile" memory. WHAT YOU SEE ON YOUR COMPUTER MONITOR IS ACTUALLY IN RAM
ONLY - a temporary storage location. To make it permanent we "save" it or
"write" it to a floppy disk or hard drive. These devices are not volatile
storage - they do not require electricity.
READ ONLY MEMORY (ROM)
----------------------
This is a special section of memory that contains instructions which are
activated each time the computer is turned on. These instructions are set at
the factory and cannot be changed - thus, they can only be "read", not written
to. ROM instructions perform equipment checks
and initialization of the computer prior to each use.
DISK DRIVE
----------
The port in which a floppy disk is inserted. This device "reads data from a
magnetic disk, and copies data into the computer's memory (RAM) so it can be
used by the computer, and that "writes" data from the computer's memory onto a
disk so it can be stored for later use. Each Disk Drive is labeled A,B,C,
etc. because we often must tell the computer which drive has the disk with the
information or where to send the information. A Disk Drive reads and writes
on a 5.25 inch or 3.5 inch floppy disk.
FLOPPY DISKS
------------
The most commonly used mass storage device. Allows entering programs to RAM
and saving data from RAM. Will hold data even after the computer is turned
off. Data on these disks is stored in concentric rings called tracks. The
Disk surface is a thin piece of mylar and is coated with a magnetized material
similar to audio or video tape.
The read/write heads can magnetize and demagnetize the coated surface
repeatedly. Therefore, the Disk can be used, erased, and reused indefinitely.
An IBM PC disk holds approximately 360k worth of information (250 double
spaced pages of text). This is called a Double-sided, Double-density
Diskette. Newer, smaller 3.5 inch disks exist which hold at least twice as
much - 720k.
FIXED DISK DRIVE
----------------
Usually named disk drive C. It is essentially a very large floppy disk. This
Fixed Disk (commonly called a Hard Drive) is secured within the machine and
cannot be seen or transported. The storage capacity is so large it is
measured in megabytes (1M = 1K squared = 1,048,576 bytes). Fixed Disks are
available from 5M on up. The main advantages are that it has enough space to
meet most users' total storage needs, operates much faster than a floppy (5-10
times faster), and is less likely to fail since it "lives" within the
protected computer.
KEYBOARD
--------
Input device that lets you enter data into the computer. The layout is
similar to the standard QWERTY typewriter keyboard. However, there are many
extra special keys that are defined by the software you are running.
MONITOR
-------
A television like device that the computer uses to communicate with you.
Typically the monitor displays 80 columns (characters) by 25 rows (lines) of
information.
PRINTER
-------
Most users get at least one Printer for their computer. It produces a "Hard-
Copy" output of your data rather than just being able to view it on the
monitor. Dot-Matrix printers are inexpensive, fast and can draw
graphics. Letter-Quality printers are more expensive and slower but create
pages better than typewritten (even pressure on each keystroke).
MODEM
-----
Short for Modulator/Demodulator. A device to send and receive computer output
over telephone lines.
┌──────────┐ ┌───────┐
│KEYBOARD │ ┌─────┐ │MONITOR│
│Mouse ├──── INPUT ────>│ CPU ├───── OUTPUT ──>│Printer│
│Light Pen │ │ RAM │ │Plotter│
│Microphone│ └──┬──┘ │Speaker│
│Joystick │ │ INPUT └───────┘
└──────────┘ │ and/or
│ OUTPUT
┌────────────────────────────┴──────────────────────────┐
│ DISK STORAGE, Tape Storage, Modem, Fixed Disk Storage │
└───────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
***** END OF FILE: Press <ESC> to return to Main Menu *****