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Input and output devices

Input devices, like a keyboard, allow us to put raw data in a computer which it processes to produce outputs. Input devices can be manual or automatic.

Manual input devices

The most common manual input devices are the keyboard and mouse. Other manual input devices include:

Trackball

Used as an alternative to a mouse. To operate it the user rotates the ball which moves the pointer on screen. They are particularly easy to use for those with limited movement in their hands and are often used in Computer Aided Design (CAD) for their increased precision over a mouse.

Microphone

Microphones are used to input sound. In computing they can be used with voice recognition and a word processing to enter text. Webcams commonly have microphones built-in too.

Touch screen

A touch-sensitive visual display unit (VDU) or screen has a grid of light beams or fine wires criss-crossing the screen that are used to detect touch. Many mobile phones use touch screens and do away with the keypad entirely. They're often used on cash machines and in shopping centres too. Touch screens are robust, easy to operate and easy to reprogram. Touch screen is also an output device.

Video digitiser

A video digitiser takes an image from a video camera or television and digitises it so it can be read by, and stored on, a computer. Video sequences captured using a video digitiser are often used in .

Graphics tablet

A graphics tablet consists of a flat pad (the tablet) on which the user draws with a special pen. As the user draws on the pad the image is created on the screen. Using a graphics tablet a designer can produce very accurate on-screen drawings as if they were drawing on paper.