Introduction To Computer Hardware
Introduction To Computer Hardware
Introduction
by
Bwiino Keefa
Safety Note
Poor Safety Habits Can Harm Both The User And The Computer!
• Never disassemble the monitor or power supply unless you have been
specifically trained on these components.
Monitors develop high voltage when turned on, and both monitors and power
supplies have capacitors (electronic parts that hold an electrical charge) that can
hurt you even if the power has been removed.
• Effective use of computer terms means more than just knowing and using the
correct terminology, it also means using it appropriately and explaining computer
terms with simple, everyday language and examples.
Basic Computer Parts
• Hardware is something you can touch and feel; the physical computer
itself is an example of hardware
• Firmware combines hardware and software into important chips inside the
microcomputer that can be touched and felt like hardware, but have software
written into them. An example is the ROM (Read Only Memory) chip. These are
electronic chips that have software in them all the time.
– A case (chassis).
INTRODUCTION – FIGURE #1
Basic Computer Parts
INTRODUCTION – FIGURE #2
Basic Computer Parts
INTRODUCTION – FIGURE #3
Basic Computer Parts
Tower Computer
INTRODUCTION – FIGURE #4
Basic Computer Parts
Introduction – Figure #5
Basic Computer Parts
Tower Computer with Hard Drive, Floppy Drive, DVD Drive, and Power Supply
Introduction – Figure #6
Basic Computer Parts
Introduction – Figure #7
Basic Computer Parts
– Riser board - A small board with expansion slots that plugs into the
motherboard and allows adapters to connect at a different angle.
Basic Computer Parts
Introduction – Figure #8
Basic Computer Parts
Introduction – Figure #9
Basic Computer Parts
• Turning the computer on with the power switch for a computer that is not
running is known as a cold boot; a user can use this technique when
running POST is required to help diagnose a problem.
• Other devices such as Zip drives, sound cards, and tape backup units
can also be installed in a computer, but the most basic components are
the monitor, keyboard, mouse, power supply, floppy drive, hard drive, CD
drive, motherboard, and adapters.
External Connectors
• Male ports – Have pins that protrude out from the connector and require
a cable with a female connector.
• Female ports – Have holes in the connector to accept the male cable’s
pins.
• D-shell connector – A connector with more pins or holes on the top row
than on the bottom so a connected cable can only be attached in one
direction and not accidentally connected the wrong way; generally
represented with the letters DB and the number of pins such as, DB-9,
DB-15, or DB-25.
External Connectors
• DIN connector – Round with small holes and normally keyed; the
keyboard and mouse are usually this type of connector with either 5 or 6
pins.
• Keyed – A connector that has an extra metal (or plastic) piece or notch
that matches an extra piece or notch on the cable, so it can only be
installed one way.
• Video port –A three row, 15-pin female D-shell connector for newer
VGA, SVGA, XGA, SXGA, or UXGA monitors.
Video Ports
Parallel Port
• Serial port – (Also known as a COM port) can be a 9-pin male D-shell
connector (most common), or a 25-pin male D-shell connector.
Serial Ports
• Keyboard port – Normally a 6-pin mini-DIN like the one used for a
mouse, but can be a larger 5-pin DIN on older computers or keyboards.
• Bus mouse – A mouse used on a computer where the mouse port isn’t
built in to the motherboard, normally connected by a 9-pin DIN (D-shell).
Mouse and Keyboard Ports
• Ethernet – These adapters are the most common type of network card
with BNC, RJ-45 (most common today), a 15-pin female D-shell
connector (sometimes called AUI), or any combination of all of them.
Ethernet Ports
• Token Ring – Have two different connectors, both RJ-45 or 9-pin female
D-shell. May have a small green sticker with the numbers 4/16 on them,
indicating the speeds (4Mbps and 16Mbps) the cards can run at. This is
helpful with identification as these cards are sometimes confused with
older video adapters.
• Sound card – Or audio cards have several ports, but their main purpose
is to convert digital computer signals to sounds (analog signals), or
sounds to digital signals. They connect numerous types of devices, as
well as the joystick/MIDI (or game) port – (see illustration).
Introduction – Table #1
Pros and Cons of Integrated Motherboards
Pros Cons
• End