Transcript Monitor
Lecture # 4
Output Devices
Output Devices
• Devices that convert machine language into
human understandable form.
• Output can be in display form, on paper or
sound on speakers.
Output Devices
• Monitor
• Sound System
• Printer
Monitors
• Monitors are the most commonly used output
devices.
• A peripheral device with a screen for the visual
display of information.
Types of Monitor
• Cathode ray tube (CRT)
• Flat-panel display
Monitors - CRT Monitors
• CRTs are the most common way of
displaying images today.
• It uses a large vacuum tube called
Cathode-Ray Tube.
CRT Monitors
Working of CRT
Scanning Mechanism
Monitor Categories Based
on Color Display
Monochrome:
One color= Background, Other Color=Foreground
Color:
RGB (Red, Green, Blue)
From 16 to 16 million unique colors.
Flat-Panel Monitors
• A monitor that uses an LCD panel or Plasma .
• Flat-Panel monitors are lighter in weight and require
less power.
Flat-panel monitors take up less desk space.
Liquid Crystal Display (LCD)
Monitor
•Most common flat-panel monitor.
•It creates images with a special kind of liquid crystal
that is normally transparent.
•It becomes opaque when charged with electricity.
Two Categories of Liquid
Crystal Displays
• Passive matrix LCD
• Active matrix LCD
Flat-Panel Monitors
• Passive matrix LCD uses a transistor for each
row and column of pixels.
• Active matrix LCD uses a transistor for each
pixel on the screen.
Thin-film transistor displays use
multiple transistors for each pixel.
Other Kinds of Monitors
• Paper-white display
• Electroluminescent (ELD) display
• Plasma/gas plasma display
Considerations When Monitor
Shopping
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Size
Resolution
Refresh rate
Dot pitch
Comparing Monitors - Size
• A monitor's size is the diagonal measurement of
its face, in inches.
• Larger monitors are available, but can be
expensive.
The diagonal
size (often 17”)
Size of Laptop vs. Size
of CRT
???????
Comparing Monitors - Resolution
• It is defined as a sharpness of a screen.
• Resolution = No. of pixels on the screen
•
More the number of pixels, the better the
resolution is.
• The Video Graphics Array (VGA) standard is
640x480. Super VGA (SVGA) monitors provide
resolutions of 800x600, 1024x768 or higher.
What happens as Resolution
increases….????
Comparing Monitors - Refresh Rate
• Refresh rate = No. of times per second that the
electron guns scan the screen's pixels.
• It is measured in Hertz (Hz) or cycles per second.
• Look for a refresh rate of 72 Hz or higher.
• It controls flicker.
• A slower rate may cause eyestrain.
Refresh Rate of
Active Matrix LCD vs.
Passive Matrix LCD
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Comparing Monitors - Dot Pitch
• Dot pitch is the distance between pixels.
• Closer the dots, crisper the image.
• Look for a dot pitch no greater than .28
millimeter.
Viewing Angle
•The angle from which the display’s image can be
viewed clearly.
•CRT Monitors
•LCD
Viewing Angle of
Active Matrix & Passive
Matrix LCD
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Interlaced & Non-Interlaced
Monitors
Interlaced Monitors:
It scans odd lines in the first pass and in the second pass
scans the even lines.
It causes flickering of screen.
Obsolete.
Non-Interlaced Monitors:
It scans an entire line of pixels at a time.
No flickering.
Commonly used.
Video Controller
• Intermediary device
between the CPU and the
monitor.
• Controls how things look
on-screen.
Monitors - Video Controllers
• The video controller is an interface between the
monitor and the CPU.
• The video controller determines many aspects of
a monitor's performance, such as resolution or
the number of colors displayed.
• The video controller contains its own on-board
processor and memory, called video RAM
(VRAM).
Video Control Board
with Monitor Cable
VRAM
Graphic intensive applications such
as games require plenty of VRAM.
PC Projectors
• A PC projector connects to a PC and is used to
project images on a large screen.
• Many PC projectors provide the same resolutions
and color levels as high-quality monitors.
• Digital light processing (DLP) projectors use a
microchip containing tiny mirrors to produce
very sharp, bright images.
Projected
Screen
Sound Systems
• Multimedia PCs come with a sound card,
speakers, and a CD-ROM or DVD drive.
• A sound card translates digital signals into analog
ones that drive the speakers.
• With the right software, you can use your PC to
edit sounds and create special sound effects.
Sound Card
•Translates digital sounds into the electric current that is
sent to the speakers.
Sound Card
•
The most basic sound card is a printed circuit board
that uses four components:
1.
2.
3.
4.
An analog-to-digital converter (ADC)
A digital-to-analog converter (DAC)
An interface to connect the card to the motherboard.
Input and output connections for a microphone and
speakers.