A Computer System Is Made Up of Various Elements Each of These Elements Affects The Interaction
A Computer System Is Made Up of Various Elements Each of These Elements Affects The Interaction
•Keyboard
•Mouse
keyboard
Are the most commonly used input devices' that accept data from
Input devises today they allow data entry into a computer system
by pressing a Set of keys neatly mounted on a key board connected
to the system
There are some keys like
Alphabetic
It is very easy to use it has a pointer with that we can use very fast
• very common
• easy to use
Two characteristics
• planar movement
• buttons (usually from 1 to 3 buttons on top, used for making a selection,
indicating an option, or to initiate drawing etc.)
Mouse cont
Mechanical
sits on special gridlike pad on desk; less susceptible to dust and dirt
Joystick
Indirect device
Takes up very little space
Controlled by either
• movement (absolute joystick) - position of joystick corresponds to position of
cursor
• pressure (isometric or velocity-controlled joystick) - pressure on stick
corresponds to velocity of cursor
Usually provided with buttons (either on top or on front like a trigger) for
selection
Inexpensive (often used for computer games, also because they are more familiar
to users)
Trackball
Detect the presence of finger or stylus on the screen. Work by interrupting matrix
of light beams or by capacitance changes or ultrasonic reflections. Direct pointing
devices.
Advantages: Fast, and require no specialised pointer. Good for menu selection.
Suitable for use in hostile environment: clean and safe from damage.
Coiled cable connects pen to c.r.t. In operation, pen held to screen and detects
burst of light from screen phosphor during display scan.
Direct pointing device: accurate (can address individual pixels), so can be used
for fine selection and drawing.
Problems: pen can obscure display, is fragile, can be lost on a busy desk, tiring
on the arm.
• flat-bed: paper placed on a glass plate, whole page converted into bitmap
• hand-held: scanner passed over paper, digitising strip typically 3-4” wide
Can work in colour: shine light at paper and note intensity of reflection.
Resolutions from 300-600 dpi, but available up to 4800 dpi.
Used in
• desktop publishing for incorporating photographs and other images
• used in document storage and retrieval systems,
doing away with paper storage
Optical character recognition (OCR) converts bitmap back into text
• different fonts create problems for simple “template matching”
algorithms
• more complex systems segment text, decompose it into lines
and arcs, and decipher characters that way
Output devices
•Printer
•Speakers
•Monitor
Printing
Popular printing technology builds up characters on page, as on the screen, as a
series of dots. Allows any character set or graphic to be printed, depending on
the resolution of the dots, measured in dots per inch (dpi).
• dot-matrix printers use inked ribbon, with a line of pins that can strike the
ribbon, dotting the paper. Typical resolution 80-120 dpi. May have many lines
in parallel, making a matrix of pins
• ink-jet and bubble-jet printers tiny blobs of ink sent from print head to paper:
ink-jet squirts them, bubble-jet uses heat to create bubble. Quiet. Typically at
300 dpi or better .
Monitors