The
Lite Side
How a Computer Works
Jeff Adkins
2001:08:10According to Sarah Losmandy, your third grade teacher
- A computer is like a TV typewriter. A typewriter is a box with
buttons on it. When you push the buttons, it makes letters on the
screen. A, B, C, D, E, F, G, and so on. This mouse thing is used
for pointing. See, if you push the mouse left, the little arrow
goes left. If you push the mouse up, the little arrow goes up.
That's what this computer used to do before someone stole the
little ball in it. The district will probably fix it sometime next
year.
Ted, that guy down the hall who knows things
- Well, sir, that's a good question. You got your motherboard,
your daughterboard, your sonboard and your fatherboard. Now most
of you have heard of your motherboard and daughterboard, but the
father'n'son boards is what the gubmint uses to keep track of you.
They're really tiny - otherwise these computer geeks'd know more
about 'em --but they're there, all right. They transmit signals to
the gubmint, and what's more, they send signals to your brain.
Mainly they make you forget what you just saw, which is why nobody
has ever seen 'em. And don't even get me started on them wireless
gizmos. That's why I wear this 'luminum foil under my cap,
see?
Gerry Sneerly, sales guy at your local computer chain store
- Well of course computers use electricity, as you probably
know, and this electricity is made out of electric ions - they're
called electrons, which flow in pipes and go left or right as the
computer directs them to. If you have a faster processor, you can
have more electrons directed more places, and more electrons is
good, see? So you need a faster processor, and of course more RAM
to store the extra electrons in. Let me call up the price for ya
on this terminal.
Arthur Q. Flackman, CEO of the national distribution center of a
large retailer
- Computers are the main nerve system of our operation. We use
them to coordinate inventory, budget, shipping, personnel and
overhead expenses. Without computers, our corporation would be
virtually helpless. Excuse me, do you see - is there an on-switch
on this thing somewhere?
Beverly Quartermain, tech instructor at your local strip mall
college
- The computer is composed of a CPU, that's a central processing
unit, which does machine-language information handling for the
computer. The CPU is connected to the I/O devices through various
ports which must be assigned to particular devices by IRQ
addresses coordinated by the operating system. The operating
system is your Windows, see? The CPU also communicates to spindles
and other devices through a bus, which is really just a collection
of wires and an information protocol.
Oh, you have a Mac? I don't think a Mac has a CPU. If it does,
it's really slow. And AppleTalk, well, that's just about useless.
They taught me that in my Microsoft certification class. You
should really just get rid of that Mac - donate it or something.
I can put together a really hot Pentium machine for you for about
43 cents --a little more if you want a hard drive.
Dean Sanenselmo, Windows user at home
- I use my computer to type letters, and sometimes I use it to
shop online, but I don't really like using my credit card number
on those Web sites, y'know? I mean, the data is just out there,
floating on the Internet somewhere, and someone could just steal
it, y'know? I also manage a mailing list for my garden club, but
it's hard typing all those letters over and over - there ought to
be a way to get the computer to do that, don't you think? I called
the tech support number, but I didn't understand what the man
said. Something about drivers and updates? I just want to use my
computer, y'know? I'd buy more software, but I'm afraid I'd just
break the computer. Do you know how to get rid of those emails
people send all the time?
Marty Simpson, Mac User
- A computer is a tool to get your job done. Do I need to know
how a car works in order to drive? Not really. It's all about the
product, baby. Let the gurus worry about the hardware.
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