input/output device

input/output device

▪ computer technology
also known as  computer peripheral 

      any of various devices (including sensors) used to enter information and instructions into a computer for storage or processing and to deliver the processed data to a human operator or, in some cases, a machine controlled by the computer. Such devices make up the peripheral equipment of modern digital computer systems.

      An input device converts incoming data and instructions into a pattern of electrical signals in binary (binary number system) code that are comprehensible to a digital computer. An output device reverses the process, translating the digitized signals into a form intelligible to the user. At one time punched-card and paper-tape readers were extensively used for inputting, but these have now been supplanted by more efficient devices.

      Input devices include typewriter-like keyboards; hand-held devices such as the mouse, trackball, joystick, and special pen with pressure-sensitive pad; and microphones. They also include sensors that provide information about their environment—temperature, pressure, and so forth—to a computer. Another direct-entry mechanism is the optical laser scanner (e.g., scanners used with point-of-sale terminals in retail stores) that can read bar-coded data or optical character fonts. Output equipment includes video display terminals (either cathode-ray tubes or liquid crystal displays), ink-jet and laser printers, loudspeakers, and devices such as flow valves that control machinery, often in response to computer processing of sensor input data. Some devices, such as video display terminals, may provide both input and output. Other examples are devices that enable the transmission and reception of data between computers—e.g., modems and network interfaces. Most auxiliary storage devices—as, for example, magnetic tape, magnetic disk drives, and certain types of optical compact discs—also double as input/output devices (see computer memory).

      Various standards for connecting peripherals to computers exist. For example, integrated drive electronics (IDE) and enhanced integrated drive electronics (EIDE) are common interfaces, or buses, for magnetic disk drives. A bus (also known as a port) can be either serial or parallel, depending on whether the data path carries one bit at a time (serial) or many at once (parallel). Serial connections, which use relatively few wires, are generally simpler and slower than parallel connections. Universal serial bus (USB) is a common serial bus. A common example of a parallel bus is the small computer systems interface, or SCSI, bus.

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Universalium. 2010.

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