More About Video
             The monitor is a passive device that just displays the video output                from the system. However, so much data is needed for the constantly                changing screen display that special provisions are made for it.
                          The video card (or video circuitry on the motherboard) has its                own RAM memory just to hold the display information, and its own                ROM BIOS to control the output. Some motherboards even have a special                high-speed connection between the CPU and the video. It’s called                the AGP, or Accelerated Graphics Port.
                          The important numbers in evaluating a video display are how many                distinct colors can be displayed and also the resolution,                which is how many pixels the image contains across and from top                to bottom. Each dot of color making up the image is one pixel.                As video technology evolved there have been a number of standards,                and each one has its own set of initials like EGA, CGA or VGA. A                common one is SVGA, which stands for Super Video                Graphics Array and has a resolution of 800x600 (that’s                800 pixels across and 600 down). Some high-performance monitors                use SXGA (1280x1024) or even UXGA with a resolution                of 1600x1200.
             More About Disk Drives
              Floppies                – Although floppy drives are being phased out in some new computers,                there are still millions of them out there and you should know something                about them. The floppy drive has a little slot on the face of the                computer cabinet, and into this slot you can slide a floppy diskette                like the one shown here. One of the reasons floppy drives are still                around is that it is very easy to take a floppy diskette from one                system to another.
Floppies                – Although floppy drives are being phased out in some new computers,                there are still millions of them out there and you should know something                about them. The floppy drive has a little slot on the face of the                computer cabinet, and into this slot you can slide a floppy diskette                like the one shown here. One of the reasons floppy drives are still                around is that it is very easy to take a floppy diskette from one                system to another.
                          Inside the floppy diskette is a round flat disk coated with iron                oxide on each side so that data can be stored on it magnetically.                This disk is called a platter, and it spins underneath an                electro-magnet called the write head that puts data onto                the platter surface. There is another head called the read head                that copies data from the platter.
                          Once the disk has made one complete revolution, data is written                all the way around. That is called a track. The head then                moves a bit and writes another circle of data to create a second                track. Altogether, there are 80 tracks on each side, for a total                of 160. Altogether, the floppy can hold 1.44 MB (megabytes) of data.
                          If we are looking for just a few bytes out of 1.44 million, it’s                not enough to know which track it is in. To help narrow the search,                the track is divided into 18 pieces, called sectors, which                look much like a slice of pie. Each sector holds 512 bytes of data,                so if we know the track and sector number of the data we want it                won’t be hard to find.

             Hard Drives – On a hard drive, data is also organized into                tracks and sectors. While each sector still holds 512 bytes, there                can be many more tracks and sectors on a platter. There are also                multiple platters, one on top of the other like a stack of pancakes.                Hard drives can hold much more data than floppies, sometimes into                the billions of bytes, called gigabytes (GB).
              
             Multiple platters require multiple read and write heads, all attached                to the same arm so they move together. It’s called an actuator arm.                When we are reading track number 10 on the top platter, the other                heads are also positioned over track 10 of the other platters, and                together all of these track 10s make up a cylinder. To specify                the location of data on a hard drive it is necessary to say what                cylinder, then the track and sector. Moving the heads from one cylinder                to another is called a seek, and the amount of time this                takes is the average seek time.
              Although                hard drives can hold much more data than floppies, the platters                are sealed into a metal case that is fastened inside the computer                cabinet, so it’s not an easy matter to move from one system to another                like you can with floppies. A hard drive is sometimes called a fixed                disk for this reason.
Although                hard drives can hold much more data than floppies, the platters                are sealed into a metal case that is fastened inside the computer                cabinet, so it’s not an easy matter to move from one system to another                like you can with floppies. A hard drive is sometimes called a fixed                disk for this reason.
                          Operating systems use a couple of different methods to keep track                of what data is stored where on a drive. One common method uses                a table called a File Allocation Table or FAT, which                is a section of the disk with pointers to data locations. There                are two versions, called FAT16 and FAT32. Windows                NT, XP and 2000 use a similar method called NTFS.
             There are two different interfaces commonly by hard drives to                talk to the rest of the system. These are called IDE for                Integrated Drive Electronics, and SCSI                for Small Computer System Interconnect.                The technical differences are not important at this point, but you                should know about the two types because they are not interchangeable.
                          Figuring out where the heads should go next and then moving them                there is the job of some electronic circuitry called the disk                controller. Every disk drive has its own controller, which may                be on the motherboard or inside the drive itself, depending on the                type of drive.
                          There are a few more things you should know about disk drives                before we leave the subject. The first sector of Cylinder 0, Track                0 is called the boot sector, and it contains a Master                Boot Record (MBR) that shows whether the disk contains                an operating system and the location of the code. If there is more                than one operating system, the drive must be divided into multiple                partitions. If not, then the whole drive will be a single                partition. All of the disk space assigned to a partition is called                a volume.
                          Another term you will encounter is a disk format. There                is a high-level format, which creates a new file allocation                table and is done with a FORMAT command. There is also a low-level                format that creates a new pattern of sectors. A low-level format                must be followed by an FDISK command to create a new Master Boot                Record and partitions.
                          Last, we have the word media. This refers to the actual                surface holding the data, which is the platter in the case of a                disk drive. Because the floppy platter can be taken out of the drive,                it is called removable media, while a hard drive is called                fixed media.
                          Other Drives – Most systems today, especially home systems,                have additional storage drives that use CD or DVD                discs. The technology for both is similar but DVDs hold much more                data. These drives do not store data magnetically but use optical                markings that are read with a laser. They are mostly used just to                read data and not to write it. The full name for CD in fact is CD-ROM,                which stands for Compact Disc - Read Only                Memory. However, there are versions that can be used to write                also, and these are called CD-RW and DVD-RW. Even                so they are mostly used to write just once for permanent storage,                and are not practical for constantly changing data.
             Like hard drives, CD-ROM drives can use either an IDE or SCSI                interface. The version of IDE for CD-ROM drives is called ATAPI,                and for SCSI the CD-ROM version is ASPI.
                          Because the discs can be removed, CD-ROM and DVD are considered                removable media. There are other types of removable media also that                are not as common, such as tape drives and Zip disks,                which are similar to floppies but with a storage capacity of 100                or 250 MB. Zip disks and tape drives also use the ATAPI interface.
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