Information Technology in a Global Society

A set of flash cards that include different terms related to information technology. It includes terms from the basics such as input and output devices, and it then includes terms related to the affect of technology on education.

50 cards   |   Total Attempts: 188
  

Cards In This Set

Front Back
Information
Communication that has value because it informs
Data
Information converted into binary digital form
Difference between data and information
Data is raw material for processing while information is data that has been processed in such a way, as to be meaningful to the person.
Analog Information
Information that is continuous and can take on any of an infinite set of values.
Ex. Digital camera captures images and a microphone transmits sounds into a sound card inside the computer.
Digital Data
Information that is restricted to a finite set of values and it uses a special way of digital information called binary information.
Input
Computers accept information from the outside world.
Ex. Keyboards and pointing devices.
Processing
Computer perform arithmetic or logical operations on information.
Ex. CPU which is the central processing unit or brain of the computer.
Storage
Computers store and retrieve information from memory and storage devices. Long term repositories for data.
Output
Computers communicate information to the outside world.
Ex. Video monitor, printer to produce paper printouts, and speakers to output sounds.
Peripherals
A device that is attached to the compute such as a keyboard, mouse, monitor, and speakers.
Keyboard
Answer 11
They put the information a person types into a program in the computer. Most keyboards have 80 to 110 keys and the layout is known as QWERTY.
Mouse
Answer 12
When you move the mouse on a surface it senses the motion and a signal is sent to the computer, and then the computer acts to how the mouse was moved or clicked.
OCR (Optical character recognition)
Answer 13
The mechanical or electronic translation of scanned images of handwritten or typewritten text into machine encoded text.
OMR (Optical mark recognition)
Answer 14
The process of capturing human marked data from document forms such as surveys and tests.
Barcodes
Answer 15
An optical machine readable representation of data which shows certain data on certain products.