Transcript chap003a

BUSI 240
Introduction to Information
Systems
Tuesday & Thursday 8:05am – 9:30am
Wyant Lecture Hall
Please initial the roster on the back table.
The course syllabus is available at:
http://home.apu.edu/~jbirch/BUSI240
Or
http://online.apu.edu
Current Events – What’s going on?
Obama Pushes Expanding High - Speed Wireless
Service
President Barack Obama on Tuesday called for expanding highspeed wireless services to meet the voracious appetite of
consumers and businesses, a task that could be tough because
airwaves are a finite resource and demand is almost limitless.
"Within the next five years, we will make it possible for business to
deploy the next generation of high-speed wireless coverage to
98% of all Americans," Obama said during his annual State of the
Union speech to the U.S. Congress.
http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2011/01/26/technology/tech-us-obama-speechbroadband.html?_r=1&ref=technology
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Current Events – What’s going on?
Google awards $100 million to Eric Schmidt
Google Inc. has awarded $100 million worth of equity to Eric
Schmidt, who is stepping aside as CEO but will stay with the
company as executive chairman.
Google said in a regulatory filing on Monday the stock and stock
options will be granted on Feb. 2 and will vest over four years.
The magnitude of the award is "unusual" for an executive who is
transitioning out of the CEO role
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110124/ap_on_hi_te/us_google_compensation;_ylt=AjrDTJM1aw7GehLaMNRq
ga2s0NUE;_ylu=X3oDMTFoN3BxYzdnBHBvcwMxMzAEc2VjA2FjY29yZGlvbl90ZWNobm9sb2d5BHNsawNnb2
9nbGVhd2FyZHM-
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Current Events – What’s going on?
Google plans biggest hiring year in company
history
Google is about to go on a hiring binge.
The company said Tuesday that it plans to recruit a record number
of new employees in 2011, as it pushes forward with an
increasingly diverse product portfolio.
Google said in a blog post that it expects to exceed its 2007 hiring
record, when the company added more than 6,000 people to its
ranks. Last year, Google (GOOG, Fortune 500) grew by about
4,500 employees, which was its second-largest year for
headcount growth.
http://money.cnn.com/2011/01/25/technology/google_hiring/index.htm
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Current Events – What’s going on?
Google makes waves and may have solved
the data center conundrum
Google is pondering a floating data center that could
be powered and cooled by the ocean. These offshore
data centers could sit 3 to 7 miles offshore and reside
in about 50 to 70 meters of water.
http://blogs.zdnet.com/BTL/?p=9937
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Current Events – What’s going on?
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Current Events – What’s going on?
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Assignment #1
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Spreadsheet is found in the Doc Sharing area of
http://online.apu.edu
Download the Assignment_1.doc file to your computer
Instructions for completing the assignment are in the
document
Due February 3, 2011 – before 8:05am
Please submit assignments in Excel 2003 format (if you have
Office 2007, please “Save As”, and select 2003). All
Assignments should be submitted electronically to “Dropbox”
found at http://online.apu.edu before 8:05am February 3rd
Assignment #1
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Assignments received after 8:05am will receive a
10% deduction. A 10% deduction will be levied for
each day the assignment is late.
 However, points are points. If you miss the deadline,
turn in the assignment anyway.
 Assignments can be reviewed up to 48 hours before
the assignment is due (before February 1st 8:00am).
Please email me and I will review and return with
recommendations.
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Chapter
3a
Computer Hardware
History of computers
Types of computer systems
Hardware components and functions
Computer peripherals
McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Calculating pre-computer
 Counting
on fingers and toes
 Abacus: manipulating stones or beads to count
 The
word calculate comes from calculus, the Latin
word for small stone
 First
mechanical adding machine
 Invented
by Blaise Pascal in 1642
 Wheels to move counters
 Machines
in the age of industrialization
 Mechanical loom
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with cards punched with holes
Early computing
 Charles
Babbage and the Analytical Engine
 19th
century
 Machine that calculated, stored values in memory and
perform logical comparisons
 Mechanical rather than electronics
 Herman
Hollerith and the 1890 census
 Punched
cards to record census data
 Cards read in a tabulating machine
 Hollerith’s company went onto become IBM
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Electronic computers
 ENIAC
– first electronic and digital computer
 1946
 Programmable
 5000
calculations per second
 Used vacuum tubes
 First generation computer
 Drawbacks: size and could only do one program at a
time
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Next wave of computing
 Second
generation, late 1950s
 Transistors
replace the vacuum tubes
 200,000 to 250,000 calculations per second
 Third
generation, mid 1960s
 Integrated circuitry,
 Fourth
miniaturization
generation, 1971
 Further
miniaturization of circuits
 Multiprogramming and virtual storage
 Fifth
generation, 1980s
 Millions
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of calculations per second
MiniComputer PDP-8 (1965)
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Microcomputers
 1975,
ALTAIR, flicking switches
 1977, Commodore and Radio Shack produce
personal computers
 1979, Apple computer, the fastest selling PC so far
 1982, IBM introduces the PC which changes the
market
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TRS 80 (1979) $599
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IBM PC/XT (1983)
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Apple IIe (1983) $1,298
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Apple Lisa (1983) $9,995
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Compaq Luggable (1985) $3,590
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Toshiba Laptop (1988) $3,000
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Apple Newton (1993) $700
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Apple Laptop (1995) $3,300
Available today on eBay for $19.99
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Apple Newton with iPhone
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Computer System Categories
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Microcomputer Systems
 Personal
Computer (PC) – microcomputer for use by
an individual
 Desktop
– fit on an office desk
 Laptop – small, portable PC
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Recommended features for PC
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Microcomputer Systems
 Workstation
– a powerful, networked PC for business
professionals
 Network Server – more powerful microcomputers
that coordinate telecommunications and resource
sharing in small networks
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How corporate buyers choose PCs
 Solid
performance at a reasonable price
 Operating system ready
 Connectivity – reliable network interface or wireless
capability
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Terminals
 Devices
that allow access to a network
 Dumb terminals – keyboard and video monitor with
limited processing
 Intelligent terminals – modified networked PCs or
network computers
 Network terminals or computers
 Windows
terminals depend on network servers for
software, processing and storage
 Internet terminals depend to the Internet or Intranet for
operating systems and software
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Information Appliances
 Hand-held
microcomputer devices
 Personal digital assistants (PDA)
 BlackBerry
 Video-game
consoles
 Internet enabled cellular phones
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Midrange systems
 High-end
network servers
 Minicomputers for scientific research and industrial
process monitoring
 Less costly to buy, operate and maintain than
mainframe
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Mainframe Computer Systems
 Large,
fast powerful computer systems
 Large primary storage capacity
 High transaction processing
 Complex computations
 Can
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be used as superservers for large companies
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Supercomputer Systems
 Extremely
powerful systems
 Scientific, engineering and business applications at
extremely high speeds
 Global weather forecasting, military defense
 Parallel processing with thousands of
microprocessors
 Billions of operations per second
 Millions of dollars
 Minisupercomputers
of dollars
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costing hundreds of thousands
Cray 2 Supercomputer
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IBM Supercomputer
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