0% found this document useful (0 votes)
3 views31 pages

Chapter 05

computer architecture
Copyright
© All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
3 views31 pages

Chapter 05

computer architecture
Copyright
© All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Chapter 5

Computing
Components
Chapter Goals

• Read an ad for a computer and


understand the jargon
• List the components and their function
in a von Neumann machine
• Describe the fetch-decode-execute cycle
of the von Neumann machine
• Describe how computer memory is
organized and accessed
2
Chapter Goals

• Name and describe different auxiliary


storage devices
• Define three alternative parallel computer
configurations
• Explain the concept of embedded systems
and give examples from your own home

3
Computer Components
Consider the following ad:

4
Computer Components
What does all this jargon mean?
• Intel® Core™ 2 Duo (2.66GHz/1066Mhz
FSB/6MB cache)
• 4GB Shared Dual Channel DDR2 at 800 MHz
• 500 GB SATA Hard Drive at 5400RPM
• 15.6” High Definition (1080p) LED Backlit
Be patient!
LCD Display (1366 x 768) If you don't
• 8X Slot Load DL DVD+/- RW Drive know now, you
should know
• 14.8”W X 1.2”H X10.1” D, 5.6 lbs. shortly
5
Computer Components
(continued)
• 512 MB ATI Mobility Radeon Graphics
• 85 WHr Lithium Ion Battery
• (2) USB 2.0, HDMI, 15-Pin VGA, Ethernet 10/100/1000
IEEE 1394 Firewire, Express Card, Audio line-in, line-out,
mic-in
• Microsoft® Windows 7® Professional
• Microsoft® Office Home and Student 2007
• 36-Month subscription to McAfee Security Center Anti-
virus

6
Sizes in Perspective

Powers of 10 for time, powers of 2 for storage

What is a Hertz?

7
Stored-Program Concept

Instructions
and data both
stored in
memory unit

8
Memory
Memory
A collection of cells, each with a
unique physical address

Most computers are byte-


addressable

Cell at address 11111110


contains 10101010

“Little endian” bit numbering:


Memory
Memory
What does 10101010 mean?

No way to answer that

Could be an instruction, a
natural number, a signed
integer, a character, part of an
image, …
Arithmetic/Logic Unit

Performs basic arithmetic operations such


as addition and subtraction
Performs logical operations such as AND,
OR, and NOT
Most modern ALUs have a small amount of
special storage units called registers that
can be accessed faster than main memory

11
Input/Output Units

Input Unit
A device through which data and programs from
the outside world enter the computer system;
Can you name three?

Output unit
A device through which results stored in the
computer memory are made available outside the
computer system
Can you name two?
12
CPU

13
Control Unit
Control unit
The organizing force in the computer
Instruction register (IR)
Contains the instruction that is being executed
Program counter (PC)
Contains the address of the next instruction to be
executed
Central Processing Unit (CPU)
ALU and the control unit called the Central
Processing Unit, or CPU
14
Flow of Information
Bus
In general: A communication system that transfers data between components
inside a computer or between computers; the medium (wires, optical fiber, etc.)
and the protocols (rules for sharing the medium nicely)

“The” bus: Connects the CPU, main memory, I/O devices, and possibly other
components (e.g. hard disk drive)

15
The Fetch-Execute Cycle

Fetch the next instruction


Decode the instruction
Get data if needed
Execute the instruction

16
The Fetch-Execute Cycle

17
RAM and ROM

Random Access Memory (RAM)


Memory in which each location can be accessed
and changed
Read Only Memory (ROM)
Memory in which each location can be accessed
but not changed
RAM is volatile, ROM is not
What does volatile mean?

18
Magnetic Tape

The first truly mass


auxiliary storage
device was the
magnetic tape drive

Tape drives have a


major problem; can
you describe it?
Magnetic Disks
Optical Disks
CD
A compact disk that uses a laser to read information stored optically on
a plastic-coated disk; data is evenly distributed around spiral track
CD-ROM read-only memory
CD-DA digital audio
CD-WORM write once, read many
RW or RAM both read from and written to

DVD / DVD9
Digital Versatile Disk, used for storing audio and video

Blu-ray
Higher capacity DVD allowing higher resolution video, etc.

21
Flash Drives
Flash Memory
Nonvolatile
Can be erased and rewritten
Supports USB mass storage standard

22
Magnetic Disks

To be leanrt by yourself from the book.


• Seek time
• Latency
• Access time
• Transfer rate

Will be asked in tomorrow lectures

23
Touch Screens

Touch screen
A computer monitor that can respond to the user,
touching the screen with a stylus or finger
There are four types
– Resistive
– Capacitive
– Infrared
– Surface acoustic wave (SAW)

24
Touch Screens

Resistive touch screen


A screen made up of two layers of electrically
conductive material
– One layer has vertical lines, the other has horizontal
lines
– When the top layer is pressed, it comes in contact
with the second layer which allows electrical current
to flow
– The specific vertical and horizontal lines that make
contact dictate the location on the screen that was
touched

25
Touch Screens

Capacitive touch screen


A screen made up of a laminate applied over a
glass screen
– Laminate conducts electricity in all directions; a very
small current is applied equally on the four corners
– When the screen is touched, current flows to the
finger or stylus
– The location of the touch on the screen is determined
by comparing how strong the flow of electricity is from
each corner

26
Touch Screens

Infrared touch screen


A screen with crisscrossing horizontal and vertical
beams of infrared light
– Sensors on opposite sides of the screen detect the
beams
– When the user breaks the beams by touching the
screen, the location of the break can be determined

27
Touch Screens

Surface acoustic wave (SAW)


A screen with crisscrossing high frequency
sound waves across the horizontal and
vertical axes
– When a finger touches the surface,
corresponding sensors detect the interruption
and determine location of the touch

28
Embedded Systems
Embedded systems
Computers that are dedicated to perform
a narrow range of functions as part of a
larger system.

29
Parallel Computing
Four general forms:
• Bit-level parallelism
– Bits can be processed simultaneously
– Ex: Increasing word size
• Instruction-level parallelism
– Instructions can be executed simultaneously
– Ex: Pipelining (overlapping instructions)
• Data-level parallelism
– Data subjected to same operation sequence simultaneously
– Ex: Calculation of all student’s GPAs simultaneously
• Task-level parallelism
– Entire tasks can be completed simultaneously
– Ex: Google servers – simultaneous independent searches
– Ex: “Pipelined” processors

30
Shared Memory
Parallel Processor
Communicate through shared memory

31

You might also like