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Introduction To Information Technology

This document provides an introduction to information technology and computers. It discusses the definition of information technology and how computers work. It describes the different types of computers including analog, digital and the six generations of computers from mechanical to current computers. It also outlines the basic components of a computer system including input, output, storage and communication devices.

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Sharie Arellano
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
151 views43 pages

Introduction To Information Technology

This document provides an introduction to information technology and computers. It discusses the definition of information technology and how computers work. It describes the different types of computers including analog, digital and the six generations of computers from mechanical to current computers. It also outlines the basic components of a computer system including input, output, storage and communication devices.

Uploaded by

Sharie Arellano
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Introduction To

Information
Technology
By: Loida J. Vergara
Information Technology in
definition
• Information technology is the technology that
uses computing with high speed communication
links to spread information from one place to
another.
• Computer is a very important component of
information technology
• The world has become “global village” due to
advancement in IT.
What is a Computer?
• An electronic device that is programmed to accept
data, process data into useful information and
store it for later use
• Computer consists of hardware and software
• Software is a set of instructions that tells a
computer what to do
• Hardware is the physical part of a computer E.g.
keyboard , mouse etc
• Relationship between hardware and software
Few Basics
CPU, Memory, I/O, etc.

HARDWARE

Application and
SOFTWARE System Software
Types of Computers
• Analog Computer • Digital Computer
Analog Computers
• An analog computer recognizes data as a
continuous measurement of a physical property.
• It has no state
• Its output is usually displayed on a meter or
graphs.
• Examples are Analog clock, speed of a car,
thermometer etc.
Digital Computers
• It works with numbers.
• They break all types of information into tiny units
and use numbers to represent those pieces of
information.
• Everything is described in two states i.e. either
ON (1) or OFF (0).
• They are very fast and have big memory.
History and Generations of
computers
The six generations of computers are:
– Mechanical era(1623-1900)
– First generation electronic computers(19371953)
– Second generation (1954-1962)
– Third generation (1963-1972)
– Forth generation (1972-1984)
– Fifth generation (1984-1990)
– Sixth generation (1990 -present)
Mechanical Era
• Abacus (3000 BC) It was used to
perform addition, subtraction, division
and multiplication. It consists of
wooden beads and calculation were
performed by moving these beads
properly.
• Napier’s bone (17th century) It was a
cupboard multiplication calculator
invented by john Napier. It was used
to perform difficult multiplication
operations to simple addition of
entries in a table.
• Pascaline (17th century) It was
invented by Blaise Pascal. It was first
mechanical adding machine It had a
series of wheels with teeth which
could be turned using hands.
• Difference Engine and Analytical Engine(1823
and 1833)
It was designed by Charles Babbage
who was English mathematician, engineer,
philosopher and inventor. He originated the
concept of the programmable computer. A
general purpose computer controlled by a list
of instructions.
• Punched cards (1890) They were able to
read information that which have been
punched into the cards automatically.
First Generation Electronic
computers
• First generation computers were used during 1942-
1955 .
• They were based on Vacuum Tube which was a glass
(tube) that controlled and amplified the electronic
signals
• Consume more power with limited performance High
cost
• Uses assembly language –to prepare programs. These
were translated into machine level language for
execution.
• Fixed point arithmetic was used
• 100 to 1000 fold increase in speed relative to the
earlier mechanical and relay based
electromechanical technology
• Punched cards and paper tape were invented to
feed programs and data and to get results.
• Magnetic tape / magnetic drum were used as
secondary memory
• Mainly used for scientific computations.
• Examples are: UNIVAC, Havard Mark 1, ENIAC
etc.
• UNIVAC • ENIAC
Second Generation (1955 – 1964)
• Bell Lab invented the transistor – function like vacuum
tubes but smaller, lower power consumption, more
reliable.
• Transistor is a small device that transfer electronic
signals across a resister
• Lower cost
• Magnetic core memories were used as main memory
which is a random-access non-volatile memory
• Magnetic tapes and magnetic disks were used as
secondary memory
• Hardware for floating point arithmetic operations was
developed.
• Index registers were introduced which increased
flexibility of programming.
• High level languages such as FORTRAN, COBOL etc
were used -Compilers were developed to translate the
high-level program into corresponding assembly
language program which was then translated into
machine language.
• Separate input-output processors were developed that
could operate in parallel with CPU.
• Punched cards continued during this period also.
• 1000 fold increase in speed.
• Examples are: TRADIC, IBM 704, LARC etc.
• TRADIC • IBM 704
Third Generation (1963 – 1971)
• Jack Kilby developed Integrated Circuit (IC)
• An IC combined several electronic computers on a small
silicon chip IBM introduced System/360 –a highly
configurable, highly backward compatible, mainframe
computer system.
• Small Scale Integration and Medium Scale Integration
technology were implemented in CPU, I/O processors etc.
• Smaller & better performance
• Comparatively lesser cost
• Faster processors
• In the beginning magnetic core memories were used. Later
they were replaced by semiconductor memories (RAM &
ROM)
• Introduced microprogramming Microprogramming, parallel
processing (pipelining, multiprocessor system etc),
multiprogramming, multi-user system (time shared system)
etc were introduced.
• Operating system software were introduced
• Cache and virtual memories were introduced
• High level languages were standardized by ANSI e.g.. ANSI
FORTRAN, ANSI COBOL etc
• Database management, multi-user application, online
systems like closed loop process control, airline reservation,
interactive query systems, automatic industrial control etc
emerged during this period.
• Examples are: INTEL 4004, IBM SYSTEM/360 etc.
• INTEL 4004 • IBM SYSTEM 360
Fourth Generation (1972 – 1984)
• Microprocessors were introduced as CPU–
Complete processors and large section of main
memory could be implemented in a single chip
• Tens of thousands of transistors can be placed in
a single chip (VLSI design implemented)
• CRT screen, laser & ink jet printers, scanners etc
were developed.
• Semiconductor memory chips were used as the
main memory.
• Secondary memory was composed of hard disks
–Floppy disks & magnetic tapes were used for
backup memory
• Parallelism, pipelining cache memory and virtual
memory were applied in a better way
• LAN and WANS were developed (where desktop
work stations interconnected)
• Introduced C language and Unix OS
• Introduced Graphical User Interface
• Less power consumption
• High performance, lower cost and very compact
• Much increase in the speed of operation
• Examples are Apple Macintosh and IBM PC
• Apple Macintosh • IBM pc
Fifth Generation (1983 – 1990)
• Computers based on artificial intelligence are available
• Computers use extensive parallel processing, multiple pipelines,
multiple processors etc
• Massive parallel machines and extensively distributed system
connected by communication networks fall in this category.
• Introduced ULSI (Ultra Large Scale Integration) technology – Intel’s
Pentium 4 microprocessor contains 55 million transistors millions of
components on a single IC chip.
• Superscalar processors, Vector processors, SIMD processors, 32
bit micro controllers and embedded processors, Digital Signal
Processors (DSP) etc have been developed.
• Memory chips up to 1 GB, hard disk drives up to 180 GB and
optical disks up to 27 GB are available (still the capacity is
increasing)
• Object oriented language like JAVA suitable for internet
programming has been developed.
• Portable note book computers introduced
• Storage technology advanced – large main memory and
disk storage available
• Introduced World Wide Web. (and other existing
applications like e-mail, e Commerce, Virtual
libraries/Classrooms, multimedia applications etc.)
• New operating systems developed – Windows
95/98/XP/…, LINUX, etc.
• Got hot pluggable features –which enable a failed
component to be replaced with a new one without the
need to shutdown the system, allowing the uptime of the
system to be very high.
• The recent development in the application of internet is
the Grid technology which is still in its upcoming stage.
• LINUX • Windows 98
Sixth Generation Computers (1990
– till date)
• Some inventions of the time are WWW, HTML,
HTTP, Web TV, java, DVD, iPod, Youtube etc
• Examples are: iMac , Sun ultra workstation etc
Computers System and its
Components
• Input Devices
• Output devices
• System Unit
• Storage devices
• Communication devices
Input Devices
• The devices that are used to enter data and
instructions into the computers
• Most commonly used input devices are Keyboard
and Mouse
Output Devices
• Output devices are used to display processed
data to the user Most commonly used output
devices are Monitor, Printer and speakers.
• Hard Copy is paper copy – tangible.
• Soft copy is intangible.
System Unit
• Its a box that contains different components of a
computer system.
• All electronic components in the system unit are
connected to motherboard
• Important components of system units are:
Central processing Unit(Processor) Memory
Storage Devices
• These are used to store data permanently
even when the computer is turned off
• It is non volatile memory
• Examples: Floppy Disk, Hard disk, CD
ROM
Communication Devices
• A communication device is a hardware
component that enables a computer to send and
receive data, instructions and information to and
from one or more computers.
• A widely used communication device is Modem
• Wired media
• Wireless media
Modulation and Demodulation
• Modulation Conversion from Digital
signals to Analog signals.
• Demodulation Conversion from
Analog signals to Digital signals.
Computers in society
• Home
• Education
• Small business
• Industry
• Government
• Health care
• Banking
• Communication
• Police Department
• Retail
Information Processing Cycle
• Data
A collection of raw facts and figures is called
data. It may consist of numbers, characters,
symbols or pictures etc.

• Information
Processed data is called information. It is
more meaningful than data.
Information Processing Cycle
• Data is collected and given to the computer
for processing.
• Computer process data to the required
information.
• The information is given to the user as output.
• Information is stored in the computer for
further use.
Advantages of Computers
• Speed
• Reliability
• Consistency
• Storage
• Communication
Disadvantages of computers
• Violation of privacy
• Public safety
• Impact on labor force
• Health risks
• Impact on environment
THANK YOU !

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