Transcript Slide 1

Microsoft Office 2007 – Illustrated Introductory,
Windows XP Edition
Understanding Essential Computer
Concepts
Objectives
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Understand storage media
Explore data communications
Learn about networks
Learn about security threats
Understand system software
Understand application software
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Understanding Storage Media
• Magnetic storage devices
• Store data as magnetized
particles on mylar, which is then
coated on both sides with a
magnetic oxide coating
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Understanding Storage Media
• Common magnetic storage
devices
• hard disks—several magnetic oxide
covered metal platters usually sealed in
a case inside the computer
• tape—inexpensive, slow, archival
storage for large companies who need
to back up large quantities of data.
• floppy disks—flat circles of magnetic
oxide-coated mylar enclosed in a hard
plastic case; almost obsolete
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Understanding Storage Media
• Optical storage devices
• polycarbonate discs coated with a
reflective metal on which data is
recorded using laser technology as
a trail of tiny pits or dark spots in
the surface of the disc
• the data that these pits or spots
represent can then be “read” with
a beam of laser light
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Understanding Storage Media
• Types of optical storage devices
• CD—can store 700 MB of data
• DVD—can store between 4.7 and
15.9 GB of data
• Blu-ray discs and HD-DVD can store
between 15 and 50 GB of data
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Understanding Storage Media
• Flash memory—similar to ROM except
that it can be written to more than once.
• Flash memory cards
• small, portable cards encased in hard
plastic to which data can be written and
rewritten
• used in digital cameras, handheld
computers, video game controllers, and
other devices
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Understanding Storage Media
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USB flash storage
device (USB drive, flash
drive)
• popular type of flash
memory
• available in a wide
range of sizes from 32
MB to 16 GB
• plug directly into the
USB port of a
personal computer
• are about the size of a
pack of gum and often
have a ring that you
can attach to your key
chain.
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Erasing and Rewriting on
CDs and DVDs
• CD-ROMs are for “read-only” access.
• CD-R drives allow you to record data on a
CD-R disk.
• CD-RW drives allow you to write data on a
CD-RW disk and access and modify data.
• DVD-R and DVD+R are recordable.
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Exploring Data Communications
Data communications is the transmission of text,
numeric, voice, or video data from one computer to
another.
The four essential components of data communications
are:
• Sender
• Channel
• Receiver
• Protocols
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Exploring Data Communications
• A sender is the computer that originates the
message.
• The message is sent over a channel, such as a
telephone.
• The receiver is the computer at the message’s
destination.
• Protocols are the rules that establish the
transfer of data between sender and receiver.
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Exploring Data Communications
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Device driver (or simply driver)
• handles the transmission protocol between a
computer and its peripheral devices
• a computer program that can establish
communication because it contains
information about the characteristics of your
computer and of the device
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Data bus
• the data path between the microprocessor,
RAM, and the peripherals along which
communication travels
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Exploring Data Communications
Components needed to connect a printer to a computer
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Exploring Data Communications
PCs have several types of ports:
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Parallel
Serial
SCSI
USB
MIDI
Ethernet
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Exploring Data Communications
• Parallel port—transmits data eight bits at a
time
• Serial port—transmits data one bit at a time
• SCSI (small computer system interface,
pronounced “scuzzy”) port—provides an
interface for one or more peripheral devices
at the same port
• USB (Universal Serial Bus) port—a highspeed serial port which allows multiple
connections at the same port
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Exploring Data Communications
• Sound card port—usually includes jacks
for speakers and a microphone, which are
designed to work with a MIDI (Musical
Instrument Digital Interface, pronounced
“middy”) card
• Ethernet port—used to connect to
another computer, a LAN, a modem, or
sometimes directly to the Internet; allows
data to be transmitted at high speeds.
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Exploring Data
Communications
Power
connection
Keyboard
port
Audio
connection
Mouse port
Monitor port
FireWire port
USB ports
Network port
Speaker and
microphone
connections
Phone line
connection
Computer ports and connections
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Learning about Networks
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Network
• connects one computer to other computers and
peripheral devices
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Network interface card (NIC)
• creates a communications channel between the
computer and the network
• a cable connects the NIC port to the network
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Network software
• establishes the communications protocols that will
be observed on the network
• controls the traffic flow of data traveling through
the network
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Learning about Networks
• Server
• acts as the central storage location for programs
• provides mass storage for most of the data used on the
network
• Client—computers on a network dependent on a
server
• Client/server network—a network with server that
acts as the central storage location
• Peer-to-peer network
• a network without a server
• all of the computers are equal
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Learning about Networks
• Standalone computer—a personal
computer that is not connected to a
network
• Workstation—a personal computer
that is connected to a network
• Node—any device connected to the
network
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Learning about Networks
Workstation
Server
Printer
Workstation
Your local workstation
Network configuration
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Learning about Networks
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LAN (local area network)
• computers and peripherals located close to each
other
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WAN (wide area network)
• more than one LAN connected together
• the Internet is the largest example of a WAN
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WLAN (wireless local area network)
• computers and peripherals that use highfrequency radio waves instead of wires to
communicate and connect in a network
• Wi-Fi (wireless fidelity) describes WLANs
connected using a standard radio frequency
established by the Institute of Electrical and
Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
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Learning about Networks
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PAN (personal area network)—a network that
allows two or more devices located close to each
other to communicate or to connect a device to
the Internet
• infrared technology—uses infrared light waves to
beam data from one device to another
• Bluetooth—uses short range radio waves to connect a
device wirelessly to another device or to the Internet
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WiMAX (Worldwide Interoperability for
Microwave Access)
• allows computers to connect over many miles to a LAN
• a WiMAX tower sends signals to a WiMAX receiver built
or plugged into a computer
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Learning about Networks
Analo
g
signal
Digital
signal
Sending
site
Modem
Digital
signal
Modem
Receiving
site
Using modems to send and receive data
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Learning about Security Threats
• Security
• refers to the steps a computer
owner takes to prevent
unauthorized use of or
damage to the computer
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Learning about Security Threats
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Malware
• describes any program that is intended to
cause harm or convey information to others
without the owner’s permission
Viruses
• harmful programs that instruct your computer
to perform destructive activities, such as
erasing a disk drive
• Antivirus software (virus protection
software) searches executable files for the
sequences of characters that may cause harm
and disinfects the files by erasing or disabling
those commands
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Learning about Security Threats
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Spyware
• programs contained with other programs that track a
computer user’s Internet usage and send this data back
to the company or person that created it
• usually installed without the computer user’s permission
or knowledge
• Anti-spyware software detects spyware and deletes
them
Adware
• software installed with another program usually with the
user’s permission
• generates advertising revenue for the program’s creator
by displaying targeted ads to the program’s user
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Learning about Security Threats
• Firewall
• prevents other computers on the Internet
from accessing a computer and prevents
programs on a computer from accessing
the Internet without the computer user’s
permission
• can be either hardware or software
• router
• a device that controls traffic between network
components
• usually has a built-in firewall.
• software firewalls track all incoming and
outgoing traffic
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Learning about Security Threats
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Spoofed site
• a Web site set up to look like another Web site, but
which does not belong to the organization portrayed in
the site
• the URL (address on the Web) looks similar to a URL
from the legitimate site
• usually set up to try to convince customers of the real
site to enter personal information
Phishing
• the practice of sending e-mails to customers or potential
customers of a legitimate Web site asking them to click
a link in the e-mail
• the link leads to a spoofed site
Pharming
• when a criminal breaks into a DNS server (a computer
responsible for directing Internet traffic) and redirect any
attempts to access a particular Web site to the
criminal’s spoofed site
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Protecting Information with
Passwords
• Logging in
• signing in with a user name and
password
• Strong password
• at least eight characters
• consists of upper- and lowercase letters
and numbers
• does not include common personal
information
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Understanding System Software
System software helps the computer carry out it s
basic operating tasks.
The four types of system software are:
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Operating systems
Utilities
Device drivers
Programming languages
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Understanding System Software
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Operating system
• controls the input and output (I/O)
• allocates system resources
• manages files on storage devices
• guards against equipment failure
Operating environment
• provides a graphical user interface (GUI)
that acts as a liaison between the user and the
computer
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Understanding System Software
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Utilities
• a category of system software that augment the
operating system by taking over some of its
responsibility for allocating hardware resources
Device drivers
• handle the transmission protocol between a computer
and its peripherals
• when you add a device to an existing computer, part of
its installation includes adding its device driver to the
computer’s configuration
Programming languages
• used by a programmer to write computer instructions
• the instructions are translated into electrical signals that
the computer can manipulate and process.
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Understanding System Software
Icons
(you
might
see
additional
icons on
your
screen)
Gadgets
(small
programs;
you might
see
additional or
different
gadgets on
your screen)
Start
button
Taskbar
Quick Launch toolbar
Windows XP starting screen
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Understanding Application
Software
• Application software
• enables you to perform
specific computer tasks
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Understanding Application
Software
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Document production software
• includes word processing software, desktop publishing
software, e-mail editors, and Web authoring software
• has a variety of features that assist you in writing and
formatting documents, including changing the font (the
style of type) and spell checking to help you avoid
typographical and spelling errors
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Spreadsheet software
• a numerical analysis tool
• used to create a worksheet composed of a grid of
columns and rows
• you type data into the cells, and enter mathematical
formulas into other cells that reference the data
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Understanding Application
Software
A wiggly red
line indicates
a possible
spelling error
Spell checking a document
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Understanding Application
Software
Graph
Cell B5 contains result
of calculation
performed by
spreadsheet software
Typical worksheet with numerical data and a graph
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Understanding Application
Software
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Database management software
• lets you collect and manage data
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Database
• a collection of information stored on one or more
computers organized in a uniform format of
records and fields
• record—a collection of data items in a database
• field—one piece of information in the record
• An example of a database is the online catalog of
books at a library; the catalog contains one record
for each book in the library, and each record
contains fields that identify the title, the author, and
the subjects under which the book can be
classified.
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Understanding Application
Software
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Graphics software
• allows you to create illustrations, diagrams,
graphs, and charts
Presentation software
• allows you to project a presentation before a
group, print it out for quick reference, or
transmit it to remote computers
Clip art
• simple drawings that are included as
collections with many software packages
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Understanding Application
Software
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Photo editing software
• allows you to manipulate digital photos
• you can make the images brighter, add
special effects to the photo, add additional
images to a photo, or crop the photo to include
only relevant parts of the image
Multimedia authoring software
• allows you to record digital sound files, video
files, and animations
Web site creation and management software
• allows you to create and manage Web sites
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Understanding Application
Software
• Information management
software
• keeps track of schedules,
appointments, contacts, and
“to-do” lists
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Understanding Object Linking and
Embedding (OLE)
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Object linking and embedding (OLE)
• refers to the ability to use data from another file, called
the source
Embedding
• occurs when you copy and paste the source data in the
new file
Linking
• allows you to create a connection between the source
data and the copy in the new file
• the link updates the copy every time a change is made
to the source data
Integration
• the seamless nature of OLE among some applications
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