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Unit 4: Secondary Storage Devices


                 4.2.2.2 LCD Monitor                                                                   Notes

                 LCD stands for  Liquid Crystal Display, referring to the technology behind these popular flat
                 panel monitors. An LCD monitor is distinguishable from a traditional CRT monitor as the
                 latter has a bulky footprint with a depth of several inches and a weight 13-23
                 kilograms or more, while LCDs are commonly 1-3 inches (2.5-7.5 cm) thick and weigh less
                 than 4.5  k.
                 LCD displays were used on laptop computers before the technology improved enough to
                 make the jump to desktop monitors. An LCD monitor consists of five layers: a backlight, a
                 sheet of polarized glass, a “mask” of colored pixels, a layer of liquid crystal solution responsive
                 to a wired grid of x, y coordinates, and a second polarized sheet of glass. By manipulating
                 the orientations of crystals through precise electrical charges of varying degrees and voltages,
                 the crystals act like tiny shutters, opening or closing in response to the stimulus, thereby
                 allowing degrees of light that have passed through specific colored pixels to illuminate the
                 screen, creating a picture.


                                            Figure 4.15: LCD Monitor






















                 4.2.2.3 Printers
                 Printers are the most popular output devices used today for producing hard-copy output.
                 Different types of printers are described below.

                 Dot-Matrix Printers
                 Dot-matrix printers arc character printers that print one character at a time. They form
                 characters and all kinds of images as patterns of dots. Figure 4.16 shows how various types
                 of characters can be formed as patterns of dots. A Dot matrix printer has a print head that
                 moves horizontally (left to right and right to left) across the paper. Print contains an array
                 of pins that can be activated independent of each other to extend and strike against an inked
                 -n to form patterns of dots on the paper. To print a character, the printer activates the
                 appropriate set of pins as the print head moves horizontally. For faster printing, many dot-
                 matrix printers print both ways—while the printer head moves from left to right and while
                 it moves from right to left, on return. Such method is called bidirectional printing. Figure
                 4.16 shows a dot-matrix printer.









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