Review Questions:
Basic Principles of
Design and Construction
of Digital Computers
© 1999 Charles Abzug
Answers to Selected Questions:
Answer: See Bebop Bytes Back, Figure 1.1
Inputs
Processor
Outputs
Memory
Answer: the Vacuum Tube (triode or pentode)
Answer: transfer resistor
Answer:
point-contact transistors
Bipolar Junction Transistors (BJTs)
Field-Effect Transistors
Answer:
Discrete Components
Printed Circuit Boards (PCBs)
Integrated Circuits (ICs)
Small-Scale Integration (SSI)
Medium-Scale Integration (MSI)
Large-Scale Integration (LSI)
Very Large-Scale Integration (VLSI)
Answer:
Processor
(Main or Primary) Semiconductor Memory
Secondary Store: Hard Disk
Removable Store:
Floppy Disk
CD-ROM
Monitor
Keyboard
Mouse
Printer
Network Card and/or Modem Card
Other (optional) devices and accessories:
Sound card
Scanner
Surge Suppressor
Power Conditioner
"Uninterruptible" Power Supply
Answer: See page 2-4 in Bebop Bytes Back.
Answer: See text and sidebar on page 2-5 in Bebop Bytes Back.
Answer: Data Bus; Address Bus; Control Bus; and Power Bus. Further explanation is to be found in Bebop Bytes Back, pages 2-6 through 2-9.
Answer:
Instructions
Numbers of different types, of which the simplest type is Non-Negative Integers
Text characters (ASCII, extended ASCII, and EBCDIC)
Bit patterns
Answer: See Figure 2.20 and accompanying text in Bebop Bytes Back.
Answer: See both Figures 2.21 and 2.22, and also the accompanying text, in Bebop Bytes Back.
Answer: For the "Beboputer", see Figure 2.23 and the accompanying text in Bebop Bytes Back. For the IBM PC, either search the internet or find a reference in your local library. Be sure that you understand and can describe and give memory address ranges for each of the following memory areas:
Conventional Memory Area
Upper Memory Area
Video RAM area
Video adapter card BIOS area
BIOS areas for other adapter cards
System BIOS area
High Memory Area (NOTE: Understanding how this area came into existence, and both the what and the why of its precise dimensions, is an excellent opportunity to put to use your newly-found expertise in understanding binary and hexadecimal numbers.)
Extended Memory Area
Answer: See Figures 2.24 and 2.25 and accompanying text in Bebop Bytes Back.
Answer: See Figure 3.2 and accompanying text in Bebop Bytes Back. Note the importance of the row wires, the column wires, and the sense wire, as explained in the text and illustrated in the right-hand component of Figure 3.2.
Answer: See the bottom paragraph on page 3-18, and all of page 3-19, in Bebop Bytes Back.
Answer: See page 3-31 in Bebop Bytes Back.