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CS 1308 Computer Literacy and the Internet WHAT IS A COMPUTER? Two Main Components  Hardware  Physical media that uses electrical current to process instructions.  Software  Instructions written by humans that tell the computer what to do. The Modern Computer  The Stored-Program Model  Invented by John von Neumann  Digital Information  Memory  Processor  Input/Output  Secondary Storage  We will revisit this model in much more detail later in the semester. Organization of a von Neumann Machine – (almost every modern computer) Data Bus Memory (RAM) Central Processing Unit (CPU) Input/Output I/O Secondary Storage Information in the Real World  Information that we gather through our senses is primarily in waves and typically analog.  Light  Sound  Temperature  Etc.  Information can be quantified down to the atom  That’s a lot of information! CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet 5 Information in the Computer World  Information in the computer world is digital.  On/Off  Fully Charged – Fully Discharged  Magnetized – Demagnetized  Computer information is binary.  0 – Off  1 – On  Detecting Voltage Levels  Why not 10 levels?  Would be unreliable  Not enough difference between states CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet 6 Bits, Bytes, and so on  A bit is one 0 or 1  Short for “binary digit”  A byte is a collection of 8 bits  They named it “byte” instead of “bite” so you couldn’t easily mess up the spelling and confuse it with “bit”.  Anybody know what half a byte is called?  The number of bits we have will determine how much information we can store. (VERY IMPORTANT)     1 bit, on or off (two states) 2 bits, four different states (00, 01, 10, 11) 3 bits, eight states In general, 2bits states CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet 7 What is Data?  Any useful input or output from the computer  Documents that you are working on  .doc, .xls, .pdf  Music  .mp3  Pictures  .jpg, .gif  Text  The quick Brown Fox…  Numbers  42, 3.14  Readings from sensors  Others…?  All of these are encoded in a consistent binary format so they can be shared between computers and users. What is an Instruction?  Computers rely on very simple instructions given to them by programmers to accomplish tasks.  Assembly Language (written by humans)  LOAD R1, #42  JUMP R2  ADD R1, R2  These instructions are translated to Machine Language  Computers only understand ones and zeros  1010001001010011  1000111101001111  1010010010100011  Programs consist of millions of these instructions  Machine language is different for each processor  That is why Mac programs won’t run on a PC Random Access Memory (RAM)  The programs (instructions) and data are stored in the Random Access Memory (RAM) for use by the Central Processing Unit (CPU).  RAM loses it’s memory when the power goes off so we store information and programs more permanently on Secondary Storage Devices (hard drives, flash drives, etc.).  Data and instructions are Fetched from the RAM and used by the CPU to perform tasks.  RAM is finite.  What implications does this have for real numbers? Central Processing Unit (CPU)  The CPU uses instructions to move data around in the computer and to produce output.  The CPU has a simple task. Follow the Execution Cycle over and over again, very quickly.  Fetch an instruction  Decode the instruction  Execute the instruction Input/Output (I/O)  Every useful computer creates some kind of output.  Most computers use input data of some kind to produce the output.  Garbage in = Garbage out  Bad data leads to useless results.  Devices  Input  Keyboard  Mouse  Others…?  Output  Monitors  Speakers  Others…? Secondary Storage  The memory in RAM goes away when the power is shut off.  Volatile  Programs and data are stored more permanently on secondary storage devices.  Contain much more space than RAM.  Hard Drives  USB Drives  DVD  CD  Others…? Organization of a von Neumann Machine – (almost every modern computer) Data Bus Memory (RAM) Central Processing Unit (CPU) Input/Output I/O Secondary Storage Quiz  Which of the following are a computer?  How can we tell?  Does it have a processor?  Does it have memory to store data and/or a program?  Does it use input or create output?