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Chapter2-Module 1 - Input Output Devices

The document discusses various input and output devices used in computers. It describes keyboards, mice, trackballs, touchpads and other pointing devices as common input devices. It also covers optical input devices like barcode readers, image scanners and OCR devices. As for output devices, it discusses monitors like CRT, LCD and plasma displays as well as projectors. It provides details on the working, advantages and disadvantages of these I/O devices.

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karanphutane2254
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
16 views

Chapter2-Module 1 - Input Output Devices

The document discusses various input and output devices used in computers. It describes keyboards, mice, trackballs, touchpads and other pointing devices as common input devices. It also covers optical input devices like barcode readers, image scanners and OCR devices. As for output devices, it discusses monitors like CRT, LCD and plasma displays as well as projectors. It provides details on the working, advantages and disadvantages of these I/O devices.

Uploaded by

karanphutane2254
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 33

Fundamentals of

Computers

© Oxford University Press 2016. All rights reserved.


Chapter 2

Input and Output


Devices

© Oxford University Press 2016. All rights reserved.


Input Devices
An input device is used to feed data and instructions
to the computer.

© Oxford University Press 2016. All rights reserved.


Keyboard
Keyboard
• Main input device for computers
• Most keyboards have between 80 and 110 keys, which
include the following:
✓Typing keys Numeric keys
✓Function keys Control keys
Advantage
▪ Easy to use and low-priced
Disadvantages
▪ Cannot be used to draw figures
▪ Moving the cursor to another position is very slow

© Oxford University Press 2016. All rights reserved.


Mouse
Mouse
• A pointing device that helps users to select items on screen by
controlling the movement of pointer
• Can be used to perform the following operations:
✓ Point Click
✓ Drag Scroll
Advantages
▪ Low-priced
▪ Easy to use and can be used to quickly place the cursor
Disadvantages
▪ Needs extra desk space to be placed and moved easily
▪ The ball must be cleaned to remove dust from it

© Oxford University Press 2016. All rights reserved.


Trackball
Trackball
• A pointing device to control the position of the cursor on the
screen
• Usually used in notebook computers, where it is placed on the
keyboard
Advantages
▪ Provides better resolution
▪ Occupies less space
▪ Easier to use as compared to a mouse as its use involves less
hand-and-arm movements
Disadvantage
▪ The trackball chamber is often covered with dust, so it must be
cleaned regularly

© Oxford University Press 2016. All rights reserved.


Touchpad
Touchpad
• A small, flat, rectangular stationary pointing device with a
sensitive surface of 1.5’’–2’’
• Users have to slide their fingertips across the surface of the pad
to point to a specific object on the screen
• The surface translates the motion and position of the user’s
fingers to a relative position on the screen

Advantages
▪ Occupies less space
▪ Easy to use
▪ Built in the keyboard so no need to carry an extra device

© Oxford University Press 2016. All rights reserved.


Handheld
Handheld Devices
Devices
Joystick
• A cursor control device widely used in computer games and
CAD/CAM applications
Stylus
• A pen-shaped device to enter information or write on the touch
screen of a handheld device
Touch screen
• A display screen that can identify the occurrence and position of a
touch inside the display region. The user can touch the screen by
using either a finger or a stylus

© Oxford University Press 2016. All rights reserved.


Optical
OpticalInput
Input Devices
Devices
• Use light as a source of input for detecting or recognizing
different objects such as characters, marks, codes, and
images

• Some optical devices are:

➢Barcode reader

➢Image scanner

➢Optical character recognition (OCR) devices

➢Optical mark readers (OMR)

➢Magnetic ink character recognition (MICR) devices


© Oxford University Press 2016. All rights reserved.
Barcode
Optical Reader
Input Devices
• Works by directing a beam of light across the barcode and
measuring the amount of light reflected back
Advantages
▪ Low-priced, portable, and easy to use
Disadvantages
▪ Must be handled with care
▪ Can interpret information using a limited series of thin and
wide bars. To interpret other unique identifiers, the bar
display area must be widened

© Oxford University Press 2016. All rights reserved.


Image Scanner
• Captures images, printed text, photographs, etc., and converts
them into digital images for editing and display on computers
Advantages
▪ Any document can be scanned and stored in a computer for
further processing
▪ Scanned and stored document will never deteriorate in quality
with time
Disadvantages
▪ Scanned documents are bigger in size as compared to other
equivalent text files
▪ Scanned documents are uneditable

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Optical Character Recognition (OCR)
• The process of converting printed materials into text or word
processing files that can be easily edited and stored

Advantages

▪ Printed documents can be converted into text files

▪ These files occupy less space and are editable

Disadvantages

▪ Cannot recognize all types of fonts

▪ Documents that are poorly typed or have strikeover cannot be


recognized
© Oxford University Press 2016. All rights reserved.
Optical Mark Recognition (OMR)
• The process of electronically extracting data from marked fields,
such as checkboxes and fill-in fields, on printed forms

Advantage

▪ Works at very high speeds. Can read up to 9,000 forms per hour

Disadvantages

▪ Difficult to gather large amount of information

▪ Some data may be missing in the scanned document

▪ A sensitive device, it rejects an OMR sheet if it is folded, torn, or


crushed
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Magnetic Ink Character Reader (MICR)
• Used to verify the legitimacy of paper documents, especially bank
checks

• Consists of magnetic ink printed characters that can be recognized


by high-speed magnetic recognition devices

Advantage

▪ Ease of readability and high security

Disadvantage

▪ Expensive equipment

© Oxford University Press 2016. All rights reserved.


Audio/Video Input Devices
Audio Input Devices
• Used to either capture or create sound

• Enable computers to accept music, speech, or sound effects for


recording and/or editing

• Some examples are microphones and CD players

Video Input Devices


• Used to capture video from the outside world into the computer

• Some examples are digital cameras and web cameras


© Oxford University Press 2016. All rights reserved.
Output Devices
Electromechanical devices that accept digital data from
the computer and convert them into human-
understandable form

© Oxford University Press 2016. All rights reserved.


Softcopy
Soft CopyOutput
Output Devices
Devices
• Produce an electronic version of an output. For example, a file
that is stored on a hard disk, CD, or pen drive and is displayed on
the computer screen
Features :
▪ Output can be viewed only when the computer is on
▪ A user can easily edit soft copy output
▪ It cannot be used by people without a computer
▪ Searching for data in a soft copy is easy and fast
▪ Electronic distribution of material is cheaper, easy, and fast

© Oxford University Press 2016. All rights reserved.


Monitors
Monitors
• Used to display video and graphics information generated by the
computer through the video card

• Similar to television screens but they display information at a


much higher quality

• Come in three variants:

➢Cathode ray tube (CRT) monitor

➢Liquid crystal display (LCD) monitor

➢Plasma monitor

© Oxford University Press 2016. All rights reserved.


CRT Monitor
• Specialized vacuum tubes in which images are produced when an
electron beam strikes a phosphorescent surface
Advantages
▪ Provide good quality images
▪ Low-priced

Disadvantages
▪ Occupy a large space on the desk
▪ Bigger in size and weight and therefore not easily portable
▪ Power consumption is higher than in other monitors

© Oxford University Press 2016. All rights reserved.


LCD Monitor
• Thin, flat, electronic visual displays that use the light modulating
properties of liquid crystals
• Replacing CRT displays at a fast pace
Advantages
▪ Very compact and lightweight
▪ Consume less power
▪ Little or no flicker of images
▪ Cause less eye fatigue
Disadvantages
▪ More expensive than CRTs
▪ Images are not very clear when tried to view from an angle

© Oxford University Press 2016. All rights reserved.


Plasma Monitor
• Thin and flat monitors widely used in televisions
Advantages
• The technology used in plasma monitors allows producing a very
wide screen
• Very bright images can be formed
• Not heavy and are thus easily portable
Disadvantages
• Very expensive
• High power consumption
• Since the images are phosphor-based, at times, they may suffer
from flicker visions

© Oxford University Press 2016. All rights reserved.


Projectors
Projectors
• A device that takes an image from a digital source and projects it
onto a screen or another surface

• Can be broadly classified into two categories:


✓ LCD projectors use their own light to display the image on the
screen/wall. The room must be first darkened, else the image
formed will be blurred.

✓ Digital light processing (DLP) projectors use a number of mirrors


to reflect light. When using a DLP projector, the room may or may
not be darkened because it displays a clear image in both

situations. © Oxford University Press 2016. All rights reserved.


Hard
HardCopy
Copy Output Devices
Output Devices
• Produce a physical form of output. For example, the content of a
file printed on paper
Features :
▪ A computer is not needed to see the output
▪ Editing and incorporating the edits in the hard copy is difficult
▪ Output can be easily distributed to people who do not have a
computer
▪ Searching for data in a hard copy is a tiring and difficult job
▪ Distribution of a hard copy is not only costly but slower as well

© Oxford University Press 2016. All rights reserved.


Printers
Printers
• A device that takes text and graphics information obtained
from a computer and prints it on a paper

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Impact Printers
• Print characters by striking an inked ribbon against the paper

Advantages
▪ Enable users to produce carbon copies
▪ Low-priced

Disadvantages
▪ Slow
▪ Poor print quality, especially in the case of graphics
▪ Can be extremely noisy
▪ Can print only using the standard font

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Dot Matrix Printers
• Print characters as a pattern of dots
• Have a print head (or hammer) that consists of pins representing
the character or image

• The print head prints by striking an ink-soaked cloth ribbon


against the paper

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Daisy Wheel Printers
• The print head is a circular wheel
• To print a character, the wheel is rotated in such a way that the
character to be printed is positioned just in front of the printer
ribbon

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Band Printers
• Printing mechanism uses a metal loop or band to produce
typed characters

• The set of characters is permanently embossed on the band,


and this set cannot be changed unless the band is replaced

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Line Printers
• High-speed printers in which one typed line is printed at a
time

• Used in data centers and industrial environments

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Non-Impact Printers
• Much quieter as their printing heads do not strike the paper
• Offer better print quality, faster printing, and the ability to create
prints that contain sophisticated graphics
• Use either solid or liquid cartridge-based ink, which is either
sprayed, dripped, or electrostatically drawn onto the page
Advantages
▪ Produce prints of good quality
▪ Noiseless, fast
▪ Can print text in different fonts
Disadvantage
▪ Expensive as ink cartridges used by them are costly

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Inkjet Printers
• The print head has several tiny nozzles, also called jets. As the
paper moves past the print head, the nozzles spray ink onto it,
forming characters and images

• Cartridges have to be changed frequently

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Laser Printers
• Work at very high speeds and produce high-quality text and
graphics

• A laser beam ‘draws’ the document on a drum which is coated


with a photo-conductive material

• After the drum is charged , it is rolled in a toner (a dry powder type


of ink)

• The toner sticks to the charged image on the drum and transferred
onto a piece of paper

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Plotters
Plotters
• Used to print vector graphics with high-print quality
• Widely used to draw maps, in scientific applications, and in CAD,
CAM, and CAE
Drum plotters
• Used to draw graphics on paper that is wrapped around a drum
• Usually used with mainframe and minicomputer systems
Flatbed plotters
• The paper is spread on the flat rectangular surface of the plotter,
and the pen is moved over it
• Less expensive, and are used in many small computing systems

© Oxford University Press 2016. All rights reserved.

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