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Components of Assembling PC

To assemble a desktop computer, the following core components are needed: 1. A power supply to provide power to internal components. 2. A motherboard that acts as the central hub connecting all other components. 3. A processor to perform computations. 4. RAM for temporary storage and a hard drive or solid state drive for permanent storage.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
137 views2 pages

Components of Assembling PC

To assemble a desktop computer, the following core components are needed: 1. A power supply to provide power to internal components. 2. A motherboard that acts as the central hub connecting all other components. 3. A processor to perform computations. 4. RAM for temporary storage and a hard drive or solid state drive for permanent storage.

Uploaded by

Khushal Goyal
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Q. What components are requested to assemble desktop computer?

 A computer is made up of a case (or chassis) which houses several important internal
components, and provides places to connect the external components, including non-
peripherals.

COMPONENTS THAT ARE REQUIRED: -

 Power Supply/PSU – Power Supply Unit, converts outlet power, which is alternating current
(AC), to direct current (DC) which is required by internal components, as well as providing
appropriate voltages and currents for these internal components.

 Motherboard/mainboard – As the name indicates, this is the electronic centrepiece of the


computer: everything else connects to the motherboard.

 Processor/CPU – central processing unit, the "brain" of the computer, most actual
computation takes place here.

 RAM – random access memory, the "short-term memory" of a computer, used by the CPU to
store program instructions and data upon which it is currently operating. Data in RAM is lost
when the computer is powered off, thus necessitating a hard drive.

 Storage - either HDD (Hard disk drive - slower of the two but less expensive)
and/or SSD (solid state drive. Very fast but not as cheap) – the "long-term memory" of the
computer, used for persistent storage – i.e. the things stored on it remain even when the
computer is powered down. The operating system, and all your programs and data are stored
here. OSes can be booted and use storage from inexpensive USB Drives, although this is
only with extremely lightweight systems.

 Optical Drive – device for reading/writing optical disks. May read CDs, DVDs, or other optical
media, depending on the type. It is essential for installing many operating systems and
programs, although the vast majority can be run from USB. It may be able to write some of
these discs, as well. Some people like to have two such drives for copying disks.

 GPU/Graphics Card/GPU – does processing relating to video output. Some motherboards


and processors have an "on-board" GPU built in so you don’t need (but may add) a separate
video card. Otherwise, you will need a video card. These plug into a slot on the motherboard
and provide a place to connect a monitor to your computer.

 Sound card - Comes with motherboard but may want to be upgraded

 Keyboard – for typing on. Some motherboards will not complete the boot process without a
keyboard attached (option often found on the BIOS) and most will report an error on boot if not
set otherwise.

 Mouse – for pointing and clicking. Unless you chose a text-based operating system, you will
likely want one of these.

 Monitor – it is a output device that displays the information after it is processed. They come
in many forms, the most common being CRT and LCD.
1.

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