Introduction Computer Manual PDF
Introduction Computer Manual PDF
Title PAGE
Historical overview computer......................................................... 2
1.1. Early calculating Devices ................................................................................. 2
1.2. Middle Age Computer ...................................................................................... 2
1.3. Modern Age Computers.................................................................................... 2
1.3.1. First Generation .......................................................................................... 2
1.3.2. Second Generation ...................................................................................... 3
1.3.3. Third Generation......................................................................................... 3
1.3.4. Fourth Generation ....................................................................................... 3
What is Information Technology? .................................................. 3
1.4. Data vs. Information ......................................................................................... 4
Types of Computers........................................................................ 5
1.5. Digital Computers............................................................................................. 5
1.6. Analog computers ............................................................................................. 6
Range of Computers ....................................................................... 6
1.7. Microcomputers ................................................................................................ 6
1.8. Minicomputers .................................................................................................. 7
1.9. Mainframe Computers ...................................................................................... 7
1.10. Super Computers............................................................................................... 7
Anatomy of computer system ......................................................... 8
1.11. Computer Hardware.......................................................................................... 8
1.11.1. Motherboard................................................................................................ 8
1.11.2. Input Devices .............................................................................................. 8
1.11.3. Central Processing Unit (CPU)................................................................... 9
1.11.4. Output Devices............................................................................................ 9
Computer Software......................................................................... 9
1.12. System Software ............................................................................................. 10
1.12.1. Operating Systems .................................................................................... 10
1.12.2. Applications Software............................................................................... 10
Languages Software...................................................................... 11
Computer Network ....................................................................... 11
1.13. Components of a Network Component........................................................... 11
Types of Network ......................................................................... 12
1.14. Local Area Network (LAN)............................................................................ 12
1.15. Wide Area Network (WAN)........................................................................... 12
Introduction computer
1. Historical overview computer
1.1. Early calculating Devices
Devices have been used to aid computation for thousands of years, using one-to-one
correspondence with our fingers. The earliest counting device was probably a form of
tally stick. Later record keeping aids throughout the Fertile Crescent included clay
shapes, which represented counts of items, probably livestock or grains, sealed in
containers. The abacus was used for arithmetic tasks. The Roman abacus was used in
Babylonia as early as 2400 BC. Since then, many other forms of reckoning boards or
tables have been invented. In a medieval counting house, a checkered cloth would be
placed on a table, and markers moved around on it according to certain rules, as an aid
to calculating sums of money (this is the origin of "Exchequer" as a term for a nation's
treasury).
As early as 1725 Basile Bouchon used a perforated paper loop in a loom to establish the
pattern to be reproduced on cloth, and in 1726 his co-worker Jean-Baptiste Falcon
improved on his design by using perforated paper cards attached to one another for
efficiency in adapting and changing the program
First generation of computer was incorporated during the second world war
by Germany to build a war plane while also in England was used to crack
German secret codes and the mode of operation was the use of valves of
about 1500 to 1800.
Second generation was made, and there was just a little change to the first
generation and its mode of operation was the transistor instead of valves,
these computers were used for calculation of great figures as well as
scientific applications.
Third generation computer was designed to suite a small piece of space and
its mode of operation was based on silicon and its used large silicon
integrated circuit.
1.6.1. Microcomputers
A microcomputer (or personal computer) is the smallest general-purpose computer
whose CPU is contained on a single integrated circuit chip. Micros are generally
equipped with a keyboard, display, floppy and hard disk drives.
Laptop computers and PCs are typically used in businesses and at home to communicate
on computer networks, for word processing, to track finances, and to play games. They
have large amounts of internal memory to store hundreds of programs and documents.
They are equipped with a keyboard; a mouse, trackball, or other pointing device; and a
video display monitor or liquid crystal display (LCD) to display information. Laptop
computers usually have similar hardware and software as Personal Computers, but they
are more compact and have flat, lightweight LCDs instead of video display monitors.
1.6.2. Minicomputers
Minicomputer, a mid-level computer built to perform complex computations while
dealing efficiently with a high level of input and output from users connected via
terminals. Minicomputers also frequently connect to other minicomputers on a network
and distribute processing among all the attached machines. Minicomputers are used
heavily in transaction-processing applications and as interfaces between mainframe
computer systems and wide area networks.
Minicomputers are referred to as task-oriented computers. They were designed to
provide selected user services rather than the full range of activities normally
associated with general purpose computers. Minicomputers can support a wide range of
online processing activities. Minis can support magnetic disks and tape, high-speed
printers and a variety of terminal devices. These are similar to personal computers but
have greater memory and more extensive mathematical abilities, and they are
connected to other personal computers to exchange data. They are typically found in
scientific, industrial, and business environments that require high levels of
computational abilities.
2.1.1. Motherboard
Motherboard is the main circuit board in a computer. The most important computer
chips and other electronic components that give function to a computer are located on
the motherboard. The motherboard is a printed circuit board that connects the various
elements on it through the use of traces, or electrical pathways. The motherboard is
indispensable to the computer and provides the main computing capability.
The most common output devices are computer screens and printers. Screens can vary
in their forms of display, producing text, numbers, symbols, art, photographs, and even
video-in full color. Printers produce printed reports as instructed by a computer
program, often in full color. Output devices such as a monitor or printer make
information you input available for you to view or use.
3. Computer Network
A Network refers to techniques, physical connections, and computer programs used to
link two or more computers. Network users are able to share files, printers, and other
resources; send electronic messages; and run programs on other computers.
The defining characteristics of LANs, in contrast to WANs (wide area networks), include
their higher data transfer rates, smaller geographic range, and lack of a need for leased
telecommunication lines. Current Ethernet or other IEEE 802.3 LAN technologies operate
at speeds up to 10 Gbit/s. This is the data transfer rate. IEEE has projects investigating
the standardization of 100 Gbit/s, and possibly 40 Gbit.
A WAN is a data communications network that covers a relatively broad geographic area
(i.e. one city to another and one country to another country) and that often uses
transmission facilities provided by common carriers, such as telephone companies.