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  1. Computer Application
  2. UNIT II: Hardware Basics: Input, Output & Memory Systems
Input Devices : Storage Organization: Primary & Secondary Memory
UNIT II: Hardware Basics: Input, Output & Memory Systems

1) What is an output device?

An output device shows the computer’s results in a form humans can use—visual (images/text), audio (sound), printed/hard copy, or physical/tactile effects.

CPU/Memory → (data) → Output device electronics → Human-perceivable result


2) Main categories & examples

A) Visual displays

  • Monitors/Displays

    • LCD (LED-backlit): Liquid crystals + LED backlight; common in PCs/laptops.

    • OLED: Each pixel emits light → deep blacks, high contrast.

    • QLED/Mini-LED/Micro-LED: Improved brightness/contrast via advanced backlights or self-emissive LEDs.

    • E-ink: Paper-like reading, low power; slow refresh (e-readers).

  • Projectors

    • LCD / DLP / LCoS tech; used for classrooms, cinema, meetings.

  • VR/AR headsets: Near-eye displays for immersive output.

  • Digital signage/TVs: Large public displays.

Key specs (learn these names):
Resolution (e.g., 1920×1080), Pixel density (PPI), Refresh rate (Hz), Response time (ms), Color depth (bits), Color gamut (sRGB/AdobeRGB), Brightness (nits), Contrast ratio, HDR support, Viewing angles.
Ports: HDMI, DisplayPort, USB-C (Alt-mode), legacy VGA/DVI.
GPU role: Renders images; output sent through these ports.


B) Hard-copy (printers/plotters)

  • Impact printers

    • Dot-matrix: Pins strike ribbon → paper; noisy but can print multi-part carbon copies; used for invoices/challans.

  • Non-impact printers

    • Inkjet: Sprays tiny ink droplets; thermal bubble or piezoelectric; good for photos, home use.

    • Laser: Uses laser + toner + drum; sharp text, fast, high-volume office printing.

    • Thermal:

      • Direct thermal: Heat-sensitive paper (receipts).

      • Thermal transfer: Heat moves ink from ribbon to label (barcodes, durable labels).

  • Plotters (vector graphics)

    • Pen plotter (legacy), drum/flatbed: Precise line drawings for CAD, maps, signage.

  • Specialty

    • Photo printers, dye-sublimation, label printers, braille embossers.

  • 3D Printers (conceptually output devices): Create physical objects from digital models (FDM, resin).

Printer specs to remember:
DPI (resolution), PPM/IPM (speed), Duty cycle (pages/month), Duplex (two-sided), Paper sizes (A4/A3), Color model (CMYK), Cost/page, Connectivity (USB/Wi-Fi/Ethernet).

Laser printing—5 steps (exam favorite):

1.   Charging (drum gets uniform charge) → 2) Exposure (laser writes image) → 3) Developing (toner attaches to image) → 4) Transfer (toner to paper) → 5) Fusing (heat/pressure fix toner).


C) Audio output

  • Speakers, Headphones, Earbuds, Soundbars.

  • DAC/Amplifier: Convert digital audio → analog signal → drive speaker.

  • Specs: Sample rate (e.g., 44.1/48 kHz), Bit depth (16/24-bit), Channels (mono/stereo/5.1).

  • Connections: 3.5 mm jack, USB audio, Bluetooth (SBC/AAC/aptX), HDMI ARC/eARC.


D) Haptic/tactile & physical-world outputs

  • Vibration motors, force-feedback joysticks, smart braille display, LED indicators, industrial actuators (motors/relays) in embedded systems.


3) How common devices work (short & simple)

  • LCD monitor: Backlight shines through liquid-crystal cells and filters; TFT (thin-film transistor) controls each pixel’s light.

  • OLED display: Each pixel is a tiny LED; turning pixels off gives true black.

  • Projector (DLP): Millions of micro-mirrors tilt to reflect light through a color wheel to the screen.

  • Inkjet printer: Heaters (thermal) or crystals (piezo) eject microscopic ink drops onto paper in precise patterns.

  • Laser printer: Electro-photographic process (the 5 steps above) builds and fuses toner images.

  • Speakers/headphones: A diaphragm moves air according to the electrical audio signal → sound waves.


4) Advantages & limitations (balanced view)

Monitors

  • Sharp, instant, interactive; color-accurate (pro models).
    – Power use (esp. high-brightness), eye strain if used poorly.

Projectors

  • Big image for audiences.
    – Needs dimmer room; lamp/laser lifespan; alignment needed.

Inkjet printers

  • Excellent photos, low entry cost.
    – Ink can dry/clog; higher cost/page for heavy text.

Laser printers

  • Fast, sharp text, cost-effective for volume.
    – Higher initial cost; color lasers are pricier.

Thermal printers

  • Simple, fast receipts/labels.
    – Fades over time (direct thermal); limited to monochrome.

Dot-matrix

  • Multi-part forms, rugged.
    – Noisy, low resolution.

Audio devices

  • Clear feedback, accessibility.
    – Noise sensitivity, privacy concerns.


5) Popular comparisons (exam-friendly)

Topic

LCD vs OLED

Inkjet vs Laser

Projector vs Monitor

Impact vs Non-impact

Core idea

LCD needs backlight; OLED self-emissive

Ink droplets vs toner & drum

Large screen vs desk display

Strikes ribbon vs no striking

Strength

Bright, affordable, long life

Photo quality, low start cost

Big image for groups

Carbon copies, rugged

Weakness

Blacks not perfect (glow)

Ink drying/clogging

Needs darker room, alignment

Noisy, low resolution

Best for

Everyday PC work

Photos/home color

Classrooms, cinema

Invoices/forms


6) Connectivity & drivers

  • Video: HDMI/DP/USB-C Alt-mode; adjust resolution/refresh in OS/GPU settings.

  • Print: USB/Wi-Fi/Ethernet; install drivers; set duplex/paper size.

  • Audio: 3.5 mm/USB/Bluetooth; select device & volume in OS.


7) Tiny block sketches

Video path

App → GPU render → Framebuffer → HDMI/DP → Monitor/Projector → Image

Print path

App → Printer driver (rasterize/PDL) → USB/Wi-Fi → Printer engine → Paper output

Audio path

App → OS mixer → DAC/amp → Speakers/Headphones → Sound


8) Care & best practices

  • Use correct paper type/profile for printing; keep nozzles clean (inkjet).

  • Set native resolution/refresh rate for monitors; enable night light to reduce eye strain.

  • Keep firmware/drivers updated; use surge protection/UPS for critical printers.


9) Practice questions (with answers)

1.   Define an output device and give two examples from different categories.
Ans: A device that presents computer results to users; e.g., monitor (visual) and printer (hard copy).

2.   List any three monitor specifications and explain briefly.
Ans: Resolution (pixel count), Refresh rate (updates per second), Brightness (nits), Color depth/gamut, etc.

3.   Explain the laser printing process in brief.
Ans: Charging → Exposure → Developing → Transfer → Fusing (toner image formed on drum, transferred, and heat-fused to paper).

4.   Two differences between inkjet and laser printers.
Ans: Inkjet uses liquid ink (better photos, higher cost/page for text); laser uses toner (faster text, better for volume).

5.   What is the role of a DAC in audio output?
Ans: Converts digital samples to analog signals to drive speakers/headphones.

6.   Why are dot-matrix printers still used?
Ans: They can print multi-part carbon copies, are rugged, and cheap to run for forms.

7.   Give one advantage of OLED over LCD.
Ans: True blacks and very high contrast because pixels can turn off completely.


10) One-page recap

  • Output types: Visual (monitors/projectors/VR), Hard-copy (inkjet/laser/thermal/dot-matrix/plotter), Audio (speakers/headphones), Tactile/physical (haptics, braille, LEDs, actuators).

  • Know specs: Resolution, refresh, brightness, color depth for displays; DPI, PPM, duplex, duty cycle for printers; sample rate/bit depth for audio.

  • Processes: LCD vs OLED basics; laser’s 5-step process; inkjet droplet ejection; audio via DAC.

  • Comparisons: Inkjet vs Laser, LCD vs OLED, Projector vs Monitor, Impact vs Non-impact.

  • Best practice: Correct drivers, correct media/settings, maintain devices.


 

Input Devices Storage Organization: Primary & Secondary Memory
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