ITCassignment 302
ITCassignment 302
ITCassignment 302
Assignment (CS-113)
NED University of Engineering and Technology
Department Of Electrical Engineering
Q) Explain the purpose, types and working mechanism of each of the following
peripheral devices.
• Keyboard
• Mouse
• Microphone
• Fingerprint or Biometric Machine
• Speakers
• Printer
• Monitor
• Headphone
Peripheral Devices
Types:
• QWERTY Keyboards
• Wired Keyboards
• Numeric Keypads
• Ergonomic Keyboards
• Wireless Keyboards
• USB Keyboards
• Bluetooth Keyboards
• Magic Keyboards
• Backlit Keyboards
Working Mechanism: The keyboard has its own processor and circuitry, a
majority of which forms an important component called key matrix. The key
matrix is a collection of circuits under the keyboard, which is broken at a
specific point under every key, which results in making the circuit incomplete.
When you press any particular key, it completes this circuit, thus, enabling the
processor to determine the location of the key that was pressed. When you type
or press any key, a switch is pressed, which completes the circuit and allows a
tiny amount of current to flow. A processor analyzes the position of the keys
pressed and sends this information to the computer, where it is sent to
something called the ‘keyboard controller’. This controller processes the
information that is sent by the keyboard’s processor, and, in turn, sends it to the
operating system (OS).
Mouse
Purpose: A mouse is used to point at objects you see on the screen. It controls
the cursor in a GUI and can move and select text, icons, files, and folders. By
pointing at an object, you tell the computer that you want to do something with
that object. For example, say you wanted to start a program. There's a small
icon, on the computer screen that represents that program. You would use the
mouse to point at the icon and then click a button on the mouse. This tells the
computer to launch the program.
Types:
• Wired Mouse.
• Wireless Mouse.
• Bluetooth Mouse.
• Trackball Mouse.
• Laser Mouse.
• Comparing Trackball,
• Magic Mouse.
Working Mechanism: How does a mechanical mouse work? Well, when you
move the mouse, the ball rolls beneath it, pushing the two plastic wheels/rollers
linked to it in the process. One of those wheels detects side-to-side movement
(x-axis wheel) and the other (y-axis wheel) detects movement in the up -and-
down direction. Both of these wheels consist of spokes that ‘break’ a thin light
beam inside the mouse. The number of times the beam breaks helps to calculate
how far the mouse has moved.
Let’s talk about how an optical mouse works, it shines a bright light down onto
your desk from an LED (light-emitting diode) mounted on the bottom of the
mouse. The light bounces straight back up off the desk into a photocell
(photoelectric cell), also mounted under the mouse, a short distance from the
LED. The photocell has a lens in front of it that magnifies the reflected light, so
the mouse can respond more precisely to your hand movements. As you push
the mouse around your desk, the pattern of reflected light changes, and the chip
inside the mouse uses this to figure out how you're moving your hand.
Microphone
A microphone, colloquially called a mic or mike, is a transducer that converts
sound into an electrical signal.
Types:
• Liquid Microphone
• Carbon Microphone
• Fiber Optic Microphone
• Dynamic Microphone
• Electret Microphone
• Ribbon Microphone
• Laser Microphone
• Condenser Microphone
• Microelectromechanical Microphone
• Crystal Microphone
Computer speakers, or multimedia speakers, are speakers sold for use with
computers, although usually capable of other audio uses, e.g. for an MP3 player.
Types:
• Loudspeakers
• Bluetooth Speakers
• USB Speaker:
• Dynamic Speaker
• Electrostatic Speaker
• Computer Speaker
• Satellite Speakers
Working Mechanism: Printers work by converting digital images and text into
physical copies. They do this using a driver or specialized software that has
been designed to convert the file into a language that the printer can understand.
The image or text is then recreated on to the page using a series of miniscule
dots. The only real difference that separates the various types of machines
available is the method in which the dots are transferred onto the page.
Inkjet printers each feature a print head containing thousands of tiny holes.
These tiny openings drop microscopic droplets of ink onto the paper in the
printer at a speed.
Laser and LED machines work in a similar way to inkjet in that the image is
made up of lots of tiny dots, which, when viewed as a whole, appear to be a
solid image. However, the method in which is adopted in creating those tiny
dots is vastly different. So, where an inkjet uses liquid dots, a laser machine
uses dots made up of toner – a fine powder of solid particles.
Solid ink printers perform in a way that combines the printing methods of both
inkjet and laser printers. Solid wax is melted and sprayed onto a large drum unit
using a print head similar to that found on an inkjet printer. The image is created
onto a large metallic roller that then transfers directly to the page. Once dry, you
are left with an image made of a crayon-like substance.
Monitor
Types:
• Cathode Ray Tube (CRT) Monitors.
• Flat Panel Monitors.
• Touch Screen Monitors.
• LED Monitors.
• OLED Monitors.
• DLP Monitors.
• TFT Monitors.
• Plasma Screen Monitors.
Headphones are a pair of padded speakers which you wear over your ears in
order to listen to a radio or recorded music.
Types:
• Closed-Back Headphones are a great type of headphones for those who
want to block out any peripheral noise when using their headphones,
regardless of your intended application.
• Open-Back Headphones aren’t “closed” and instead have “open” ear cups
that allow some sound to escape into the environment (on purpose!).
• On-Ear Headphones go over the head and rests on top of the ears.
• Over-Ear Headphones fit on the top of head and “over” (on, as well as
around, our ear cartilages so the entire ear is “cupped”) to focus on sound
isolation.
• In-Ear Headphones
• Earbuds.
• Bluetooth Headphones.
• Noise-Cancelling Headphones.