A-level Computing 2009/AQA/Computer Components, The Stored Program Concept and the Internet/Hardware Devices/Output devices



 Pay special attention to devices with an orange background, you need to be able to describe exactly how they work!

Cathode-Ray Tube
A cathode ray tube is a Visual Display Unit. You might know them as the old 'fat' televisions and monitors that have mostly been superseded by LCD screens.

Pros

Cons



Flat Screen (LCD)
LCDs are Visual Display Units. Most modern Televisions and Monitors are liquid crystal displays (LCD). An LCD screen is made up by an array of pixels or picture elements, each pixel contains Red Green and Blue and there is a back light that shines through the pixel, creating an image To change the image displayed on the screen will require different combinations of Red, Green and Blue pixels. To do this the pixels are sandwiched between two polarized grills. These grills are controlled by an electric current and when current is applied, the grids go perpendicular to each other, blocking out all light from a particular colour. Applying different current patterns to different pixels means that you can choose whether each pixel displays Red, Green or Blue, thus building an image:

Pros LCD screens have several benefits over traditional CRT screens:

Cons



Plasma Screen
Plasma screens are Visual Display Units. They are generally more expensive than LCDs and CRTs, and offer similar performance to an LCD. They are power hungry and used mainly for large television sets

Sound output
Speech output might include speech synthesis, headphones or speakers

Electronic paper
Electronic paper is made up of tiny plastic balls that have different colours on each side (black and white). Applying an electrical current to the 'paper' flips the balls to make the pattern of a picture and an image is displayed. The image stays there until you apply another current. This is used in modern e-book readers such as the Amazon Kindle and in other devices such as phones Pros

Cons



Printers
There are several different types of Printers, the one's you need to know are below

Impact Printer
Impact printers rely on a forcible impact to transfer ink to the media, similar to the action of a typewriter. All but the dot matrix printer rely on the use of formed characters, letterforms that represent each of the characters that the printer was capable of printing. Impact printers varieties include, typewriter-derived printers, teletypewriter-derived printers, daisy wheel printers, dot matrix printers and line printers. Dot matrix printers remain in common use in businesses where multi-part forms are printed, such as car rental services, this allows several sheets of paper to be written to with one strike of the printer head, it also allows for carbon paper to be written to through sealed envelopes:

Dot matrix printers use a print head containing a line of pins. The number of pins can vary from 7 into the dozens. As the print head passes over the paper the pins impact on the ink ribbon forming characters on the paper line by line.



Pros

Cons



Inkjet Printer
Inkjets are examples of non-impact printer. They operate by propelling variably-sized droplets of liquid or molten material (ink) onto almost any sized page. They are the most common type of computer printer used by consumers.
 * 1) The paper is fed into the printer
 * 2) The print head contains one or more cartridges of ink of different colours (some only have black ink)
 * 3) The print head moves from one side to another, each cartridge spraying tiny particles of ink onto the paper to form the correct pattern
 * 4) After one line is finished the paper is fed through a little more, and the next line printed



Pros

Cons

Laser Printer
Lasers are examples of non-impact printers. A laser printer rapidly produces high quality text and graphics. They work in the following way:


 * 1) The drum is given a negative charge
 * 2) This charge is erased in the correct places by the laser to create the image using the photoelectric effect
 * 1) The drum is coated in toner, a negatively charged fine dust, which is repelled by the charge on the drum. Only in the uncharged areas does the toner apply
 * 2) The drum rolls over the paper and transfers the toner onto it(if your printing gets jammed the paper might have this dust on it which comes off on your hands)
 * 3) The paper is then put through heated rollers which melts the toner and seals it to the paper, thus finishing the image.

Pros

Cons



Plotter
Plotters were an alternate printing technology once common in engineering and architectural firms. Pen-based plotters rely on contact with the paper, but not impact, per se, and special purpose pens that are mechanically run over the paper to create text and images. They were particularly adept to printing vector graphics, though they have generally been replaced with wide-format conventional inkjet/laser printers.


 * 1) Paper is placed in the plotter.
 * 2) The plotter arm selects a pen of the correct colour
 * 3) the arm then moves the pen to the area where printing needs to start.
 * 4) the pen is lowered onto the paper and the arm moves it drawing a continuous image.
 * 5) The pen raises and lowers depending on what needs to be drawn, the plotter can also select from a group of colour pens

(some plotters involve keeping the pens stationary and moving the paper instead)

Pros

Cons



For a seven pin impact printer, what character would the following line codes output: 1,2,3,4,5,6,7 | 1,4 | 1,4 | 2,3