itec 1011 introduction to information technologies 10. computer peripherals – part ii chapt. 10
TRANSCRIPT
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
10. Computer Peripherals – Part II
Chapt. 10
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Plan
• Tape drives
• Optical disks
• Displays
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Rationale
• Magnetic tape is used as secondary storage when…• Offline storage is acceptable or preferred
• Capacity requirements exceed that of floppy disks
• Sequential access is adequate
• Magnetic tape is used for…• Off-site data preparation
• Backup
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Terminology
• Backup• The act of copying files to a second medium
(typically disk or tape) as a precaution in case the first medium fails
• It is important in computing to “backup your files regularly”
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Types of Tape Drives
• Two types:• Reel-to-reel
• Used on mainframe computers
• Cartridge• Used on PCs
• In either case, the tape can be removed from the drive (i.e., the tape drive supports offline storage)
• When a tape is loaded in a tape drive and is ready to be accessed, the tape is mounted
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Reel to Reel Tape Drive
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Tape Reels
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Tape Reel Specifications
• Reel diameter: 10 ½”• Tape width: ½”• Tape length: 2400 feet• Number of tracks: 9• Drive has nine read/write heads
• 9 bits of data are read/written at a time (8 data + parity)• Each group of nine bits is called a frame
• Data density/capacity• 1600 frames/inch 2400 x 12 x 1600 = 46,080,000
bytes/reel• 6250 frames/inch 2400 x 12 x 6250 = 180,000,000
bytes/reel
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Nine-track Tape Layout
Physicalrecord
Inter-recordgap
1 byte of data(8 data bits + parity)
Track 1
Track 9
½”
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Tape Cartridge
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Types of Tape Cartridges
• QIC (Quarter Inch Cartridge)
• DAT (Digital Audio Tape)
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
QIC (Quarter Inch Cartridge)
• Pronounced: quick• Introduced in 1970s• Popular format for backing up personal
computers• Two general classes
• Full-sized, 5¼” (also called “data cartridge”)• Mini-cartridge, 3½”
• Capacities up to 10 GB
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
DAT (Digital Audio Tape)
• Tape width: 8 mm or 4 mm
• Uses helical scan technique to record data (like VCRs)
• Capacities to 24 GB (4 mm) or 40 GB (8 mm)
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Plan
• Tape drives
• Optical disks
• Displays
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Operation
• Uses light generated by lasers to record and retrieve information
• Information is stored by varying the light reflectance characteristics of the medium
• Available in read-only (CD-ROM) and read/write formats
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
CD-ROM
• CD-ROM stands for “compact disc, read-only memory”
• Evolved from audio CDs
• Disk size: 120 mm (5¼”)
• Capacity: 550 MB
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
CD-ROM vs. Magnetic Disk
CD-ROM Magnetic Disk
• One spiral track (3 miles long!)
• Multiple tracks of concentric circles
• Constant bit density • Variable bit density
• Disk speed varies (CLV, constant linear velocity)
• Disk speed constant (CAV, constant angular velocity)
• Constant transfer rate • Constant transfer rate
• Capacity: 550 MB • Capacity: varies
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
CD-ROM Data Organization
• 270,000 blocks of 2048 bytes each (typically)
• 270,000 2048 = 552,960,000 bytes• Extensive error checking and correction
(e.g., bad regions of the disk flagged)• Substantial overhead for error correction
and identifying blocks• Capacity can be as high as 630 MB
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
CD-ROM Drive Spec’s
Speed Seek Time Transfer Rate
1x 600 ms 150 KB/s
4x 135-160 ms 600 KB/s
8x 135-180 ms 1.2 MB/s
16x 100-150 ms 2.4 MB/s
24x 100-150 ms 3.6 MB/s
32x 100-150 ms 4.8 MB/s
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Pits and Lands (1 of 2)
• Data are stored as “pits” and “lands”• These are burned into a master disk by a high
powered laser• Master disk is reproduced mechanically by a
stamping process• Data surface is protected by a clear coating• Data are read by sensing the reflection of laser light
• A pit scatters the light• A land reflects the light
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Pits and Lands (2 of 2)
Laser
Land
Reflectedlight
LaserLaser
Pit
Scatteredlight
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
CD-ROM Read Process
Laserdiode
Prism
Light detector
Land Pit
Transparentprotective layer
More detail
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Laser Diodes
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Read/Write Variations
• WORM (Write Once, Read Many)
• Magneto Optical
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
WORM Disks and Drives
• WORM = Write-once, read many• Also called CD-R, for CD Recordable• Begin with blank CDs• WORMs drives are used to write the CD• The write process is irreversible• Many standards, some disks may be read on standard
CD-ROM drive, others may not• Applications
• Infrequent data distribution• Small quantities• For large quantities, cheaper to have CR-ROMs manufactured
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Magneto Optical
• Disk may be written, read, and rewritten• Write process is preformed at high temperature• Combines features of optical and magnetic
technology• Data are stored as a magnetic charge on the disk
surface• During reading, the polarity of the reflected light
is sensed (not the intensity)
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Plan
• Tape drives
• Optical disks
• Displays
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Types of Displays
• Two main types• CRT (cathode ray tubes)• LCD (liquid crystal display)
• Related terms• Monitor or screen
• A display is often called a “monitor” or “screen”• However, the term “monitor” usually refers to the
entire box, where as “screen” often implies just a sub-assembly within the box
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Colour Displays
• CRT displays• each pixel is composed of three superimposed dots: red,
green, and blue• Hence, RGB display• The three dots are created by three separate beams• Ideally, the three dots should converge at the same point,
however, in practice there is a small amount of convergence error, and this makes the pixels appear fuzzy
• LCDs• Colour is created by filtering/blocking different
frequencies of light
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Operation of a CRT Display
• A CRT display contains a vacuum tube• At one end are three electron guns, one each for
red, green, and blue• At the other end is a screen with a phosphorous
coating• The three electron guns fire electrons at the screen
and excite a layer of phosphor• Depending on the beam, the phosphor glows,
either red, green, or blue
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
CRT Display
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Operation of an LCD
• Two sheets of polarizing material with a liquid crystal solution between them
• An electric current passes through the liquid, causing the crystals to align so that light cannot pass through them
• Each crystal, therefore, acts like a shutter, either allowing light to pass through or blocking the light
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Liquid Crystal Display
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Pixels
• A Pixel is a “picture element”• a single point in a graphic image• A graphics display is divided into thousands (or millions)
of pixels arranged in rows and columns• The pixels are so close together, they appear connected• The number of bits used to represent each pixel determines
how many colours or shades of grey can be represented• For a B&W (black and white) monitor, each pixel is
represented by 1 bit• With 8 bits per pixel, a monitor can display 256 shades or
grey or 256 colours (Note: 28 = 256)
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Display Size
• Usually specified in “inches”
• Value cited is the diagonal dimension of the raster -- the viewable area of the display
• E.g., a 15” monitor
15”
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Resolution
• Resolution is the number of pixels on a screen display
• Usually cited as n by m• n is the number of pixels across the screen• m is the number of pixels down the screen
• Typical resolutions range from…• 640 by 480 (low end), to• 1,600 by 1,200 (high end)
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Video RAM Requirements
• Total number of pixels is n m• Examples
• 640 480 = 307,200 pixels• 1,600 1,200 = 1,920,000 pixels
• Video RAM required equals total number of pixels times the number of bits/pixel
• Examples• 640 480 8 = 2,457,600 bits = 307,200 bytes = 300
Kbytes• 1,600 1,200 24 = 46,080,000 bits = 5,760,000 bytes =
5,625 Kbytes = 5.49 Mbytes
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
ResolutionBits per pixel
8 bit 16 bit 24 bit
640 x 480 300 600 900
800 x 600 468.75 937.5 1406.25
1024 x 768 768 1536 2304
1152 x 1024 1152 2304 3456
1280 x 1024 1280 2560 3840
1600 x 1200 1875 3750 5625
Video RAM (KB) Per Image
See previous slide for calculations
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Aspect Ratio
• Aspect ratio is the ratio of the width to height of a display screen
• For a 640 by 480 display, the aspect ratio is 640:480, or 4:3
• Related terms• Landscape
• The width is greater than the height
• Portrait• The height is greater than the width
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Dot Pitch
• Dot pitch is a measure of the diagonal distance between phosphor dots (pixels) on a display screen
• One of the principal characteristics that determines the quality of a display
• The lower the number, the crisper the image• Cited in mm (millimeters)• Typical values range from 0.15 mm to 0.30 mm• Note
• Dot pitch, as specified, is the capability of the display• For a particular image, dot pitch can be calculated as…
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Dot Pitch Image Example
• Q: What is the dot pitch of an image displayed on a 15” monitor with a resolution of 640 by 480?
• A:
640
480Z1. Z = (6402 + 4802)1/2 = 800
2. 1 mm = 0.039 inch
Dot pitch = 15 / 800 inches= 0.01875 inches= 0.01875 / 0.039 mm= 0.481 mm
Notes:
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Dot Pitch Illustrated
Pixel
0.481 mm
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Exercise – Dot Pitch Image
• Q: What is the dot pitch of an image displayed on a 19” monitor with a resolution of 1,280 by 1,024?
Skip answer Answer
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Exercise – Dot Pitch Image
• Q: What is the dot pitch of an image displayed on a 19” monitor with a resolution of 1,280 by 1,024?
• A:
Answer
Dot pitch = 19 / 1639.2 inches= 0.01159 inches= 0.01159 / 0.039 mm
= 0.30 mm
Note:
Z = (12802 + 10242)1/2 = 1639.2
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Dot Pitch Image Table
ResolutionDisplay Size
14” 15” 17” 19” 21”
640 x 480 0.45 0.48 0.54 0.61 0.67
800 x 600 0.36 0.38 0.44 0.49 0.54
1024 x 768 0.28 0.30 0.34 0.38 0.42
1152 x 1024 0.23 0.25 0.28 0.32 0.35
1280 x 1024 0.22 0.23 0.27 0.30 0.33
1600 x 1200 0.18 0.19 0.22 0.24 0.27
Note: Dot pitch figures in mm (millimeters)
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Dot Pitch Example
• Q: A 19” CRT monitor, made by Vapour Hardware Inc., has a dot pitch specification of 0.28 mm. What is the highest resolution at which this monitor will reliably operate?
• A:
Discussion: Just read the value above from the dot pitch image table. For a 19” monitor, a 1,280 by 1,024 image has a dot pitch of 0.30 mm. The monitor’s dot pitch specification exceeds this, therefore, the monitor will work fine at this resolution. However, a 1,600 by 1,200 image on a 19” monitor requires a dot pitch of 0.24, which is beyond the capability of the example monitor.
1,280 by 1,024
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Exercise – Dot Pitch
Skip answer Answer
• Q: A 17” CRT monitor has a dot pitch specification of 0.30 mm. What is the highest resolution at which this monitor may operate?
• A:
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Exercise – Dot Pitch
• Q: A 17” CRT monitor has a dot pitch specification of 0.30 mm. What is the highest resolution at which this monitor may operate?
• A: 1,024 by 768
Answer
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Interlacing
• Interlacing is an image drawing technique whereby the electron guns draw only half the horizontal lines with each pass
• The odd lines are drawn on the 1st pass, the even lines are drawn on the 2nd pass
• A non-interlaced imaged is completely drawn in one pass
• Let’s see…
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Interlacing Animation
Non-interlaced scanning Interlaced scanning
Electron beam “on” (drawing)
Electron beam “off” (retracing)
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Uses of Interlacing
• TVs use interlaced scanning
• Computer monitors (CRTs) use non-interlaced scanning
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Retracing
• Retracing is the act of repositioning the electron beam
• The beam must undergo horizontal retrace (once per line) and vertical retrace (once per image)
Verticalretrace
Horizontalretrace
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Scan Frequency
• Horizontal scan frequency• The frequency with which an electron beam moves back-and-
forth• The rate of drawing each line in an image• Typical range: 30-65 kHz
• Vertical scan frequency• The frequency with which an electron beam moves up-and-
down• Also called vertical refresh rate , refresh rate, vertical
frequency, vertical scan rate, or frame rate• The rate of drawing images• Typical range: 45-120 Hz
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Multi-scan Monitors
• A multi-scan monitor can adjust to the horizontal and vertical scan frequencies of the video signal produced by the interface
• Also called multi-sync, multi-frequency, or variable-frequency monitors
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Video Frequency
• The frequency at which pixels are drawn on the display
• Specified as a maximum capability of the monitor
• Also called video bandwidth
• Typical ranges 50-100 MHz
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Video Frequency vs. Resolution and Frame Rate
Video Frequency > Resolution Frame Rate
Example: Daewoo CMC-1703B specifications: Video frequency = 85 MHz Max resolution = 1280 by 1024 @ 60Hz
Note: 1280 1024 60 = 78,643,200 = 78.6 MHz
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Display Properties in Windows
• Right click on the desktop (display) and select Properties
• Click Settings to determine/change the setting for Colors and Screen area (Resolution)
• To determine/change screen refresh rate, click on Advanced, then click on Adapter
Next 2 slides
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Note:Varies on different systems
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Note:Varies on different systems Demo
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Colour Control
• Three ways to control colour1. Selecting from a predefined palette2. Individually control red, green, and blue3. Individually control colour and brightness
• Colour is also called chrominance (C)• Chrominance consists of hue and saturation
• Brightness is also called luminance (Y)
• Most applications support all three techniques
Next 2 slides
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Predefined Palette
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Custom Control
Demo
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Video Interfaces (1 of 2)
• Composite video• Definition: a video interface in which all the colour and
sync information is contained in one signal• Contrast with RGB• TVs in North America use composite video
• RGB (Red, Green, Blue)• Definition: a video interface in which the red, green,
and blue signals, and the horizontal and vertical sync signals, are separate
• Computer monitors use RGB
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Video Interfaces (2 of 2)
• S-video• A technology for transmitting video signals over a
cable by dividing the video information into two separate signals: one for colour (chrominance, C), and one for brightness (luminance, Y)
• Also called Y/C video
• Televisions (internally) are designed for separate luminance and chrominance signals
• Computer monitors are designed for separate red, green, and blue signals
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
RGB Video Standards
• A variety of standards exist for delivering RGB signals to a video display monitor
• Developed and consolidated by VESA (Video Electronics Standards Association)
• Examples• VGA – video graphics adapter• SVGA – super-VGA• XGA – extended graphics adapter
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
VGA/SVGA/XGA PinoutsPin Signal
1 Red
2 Green
3 Blue
4 ID bit 2
5 Ground
6 Red return
7 Green return
8 Blue return
9 -
10 Sync return
11 ID bit 0
12 ID bit 1
13 Horizontal sync
14 Vertical sync
15 -
DE15 connector
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
S-video Pinouts
Pin Signal
1 Ground
2 Ground
3 Y (luminance)
4 C (Chrominance) 4-pin mini-DIN connector
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Flat Panel Displays
• A very thin display screen
• Most flat panel displays use LCD technology
• Other technologies• ELD (electro-luminescent display)• Gas plasma display
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Active-Matrix Display
• A type of liquid crystal display in which the image is refreshed more frequently than in conventional (passive matrix) displays
• Most common type of active-matrix display is known as TFT (thin-film transistor)
• The terms active matrix and TFT are used interchangeably
ITEC 1011 Introduction to Information Technologies
Thank you
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