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Portable PCs

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Typical laptops function as a fully standalone PC which may be considered a desktop replacement ... Trackballs on early laptops ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Portable PCs


1
Portable PCs
  • Chapter 14

2
Overview
  • In this chapter, you will learn to
  • Describe the many types of portable computing
    devices available
  • Enhance and upgrade portable PCs
  • Troubleshoot portable PCs

3
Portable Computing Devices
4
Whats in a Name?
  • Whats the difference between a portable, a
    laptop, and a notebook?
  • Nothing!
  • Theres no industry standard for names
  • However, most notebooks are laptops in the 8 ½ x
    11-inch range

5
Desktop Replacements
  • Typical laptops function as a fully
    standalone PC which may be considered
    a desktop replacement
  • Input devices
  • Trackballs on early laptops
  • IBMs TrackPoint pencil
    eraser-sized joystick in the middle
    of the keyboard
  • Touchpads
  • LCD monitors

6
Desktop Extenders
  • Desktop extenders are portable devices that are
    not intended to take the place of a desktop
  • Think of them as a smaller, lighter, less
    powerful laptop for less intensive uses

7
PDAs
  • Personal Digital Assistants (PDAs) are tiny,
    hand-held portable computing devices
  • Address book, personal notes, appointments, word
    processors, image viewers
  • Often use handwriting recognition with a
    pen-style stylus for pen-based
    computing
  • Uses specialized OSs such as Windows CE,
    PocketPC, PalmOS, and Linux
  • Made by Palm, Sony, Toshiba,
    Hewlett-Packard, Microsoft and other
    companies

8
HotSync PDA Memory
  • HotSync
  • You can easily synchronize your data on your PDA
    with your office PC
  • Just put it on your cradle by the PC and click
    the button to synchronize
  • PDA Memory
  • Internal flash ROM of 1 MB or more
  • Compact Flash cards that are removable and
    upgradable for removable storage needs

9
Enhance and Upgrade the Portable PC
10
PC Cards
  • PC Cards are commonly known as the Personal
    Computer Memory Card International Association
    (PCMCIA)
  • Hot-swappable devices that perform every PC
    function
  • Easy to use, inexpensive, and convenient

11
PC Cards
  • CardBus card is a 32-bit PC Card with a special
    slot
  • PCI bus mastering
  • Can perform up to 8 functions compared with 2
    functions for a regular PC card (such as a modem
    and network card combined)
  • Regular PC cards will work in a CardBus slot
  • CardBus uses 3.3 volts of power regular PC
    cards use 5 volts

12
PC Cards
  • Two levels of software drivers
  • Socket services
  • Device drivers that enable the system to detect
    when a PC Card is inserted or removed, and
    provide necessary I/O to the device
  • Standardized and handled by the system BIOS
  • Card services
  • Recognize the function of a particular PC Card
    and provide the specialized drivers required to
    make the card work
  • Handled by Windows
  • Accessed via PCMCIA option in Control Panel

13
PC Card Types
14
Limited-Function Ports
  • All portable PCs and many PDAs come with a
    variety of ports
  • VGA connection for hooking up an external monitor
  • PS/2 port for an external keyboard or mouse
  • Speaker ports
  • Built-in NICs and modems for network support
  • All of these work the same as in desktop PCs
  • Video ports
  • Allow displaying the laptop LCD, the external
    monitor, a projector, or a combination
  • Extra function key (like the Control or Alt keys)

15
General-Purpose Ports
  • USB ports
  • Support up to 127 devices
  • Usually most USB sharing is limited to 3 or 4
    devices
  • 12 Mbps throughput
  • Maximum cable length of 5 meters only
  • Due to electrical interference, its better to
    stay around 2 meters maximum
  • Hi-Speed USB
  • Backwards compatible with regular USB
  • 480 Mbps throughput

16
USB Configuration
  • Ensure that the CMOS provides an IRQ for USB
    ports
  • Ensure that the operating system supports USB
  • All versions of Windows from Win95B and newer
    (except for NT) support USB
  • Always install device drivers
    before plugging in a
    new USB device

17
Port Replicators
  • Port replicators are devices that plug into a USB
    port and offer common PC ports such as serial,
    parallel, network, and PS/2

18
Docking Stations
  • Easily gives laptops access to large monitors,
    regular mice, network connections, full size
    keyboards
  • Provides an easy way to take your laptop in and
    out of the office
  • Basically a port replicator with extra features
    such as a DVD drive or PC Card slots

19
FireWire
  • FireWire has faster transfer rates than USB
  • Uses a 6-pin powered connector that can provide
    power to an attached device (like USB)
  • Or a 4-pin unpowered connector

20
The Modular Laptop
21
The Modular Laptop
  • The common components that can be replaced or
    upgraded in a portable PC are
  • RAM
  • 72-pin or 144-pin SO-DIMMs
  • Hard drives
  • ATA drives in the 2.5-inch format dominate
    laptops today
  • Check for the proper settings (Cable Select,
    Master, Slave) but otherwise the same as regular
    3.5-inch drives
  • Modular CPUs
  • Just replace with a newer module from Intel or
    AMD
  • Video cards
  • Least standardized

22
Replacing RAM
  • Theres no standard but you usually have to
    unscrew or pop open a panel on the underside of
    the portable

23
Modular Drives
  • Laptop manufacturers may include modular drives
    that may be swapped in and out
  • CD-ROM
  • DVD-ROM
  • CD-R/W
  • Floppy disk drives

24
Managing and Maintaining Portables
25
Maintenance
  • Everything you normally do to maintain a PC
    applies to portable PCs
  • Windows patches and Service Packs
  • Upgraded drivers
  • Check Disk
  • ScanDisk
  • Defragment
  • Disk Cleanup

26
Batteries
  • Types of Batteries
  • Nickel-Cadmium (Ni-Cd)
  • Nickel Metal Hydride (Ni-MH)
  • Lithium Ion (Li-Ion)

27
Nickel-Cadmium Batteries
  • Nickel-Cadmium (Ni-Cd) batteries were the first
    batteries commonly used in mobile PCs
  • Provide a steady voltage but subject to battery
    memory problem
  • Battery memory is the tendency of a Ni-Cd battery
    to lose a significant amount of its recharge
    ability if charged repeatedly without being
    totally discharged
  • To avoid this problem, these batteries had to be
    discharged completely before each recharging
  • Susceptible to self-discharge over time

28
Nickel Metal Hydride
  • Nickel Metal Hydride (Ni-MH) batteries were the
    next generation of mobile PC batteries
  • Less susceptible to memory problems and
    last longer between recharges
  • Still susceptible to heat
  • Popular replacement for Ni-CD
    systems

29
Lithium Ion
  • Lithium Ion is the most common type of battery
    used today
  • Powerful and completely immune to memory problems
  • Built-in circuitry to prevent accidental
    overcharging

30
Other Portable Power Sources
  • Smart batteries tell the computer when they need
    to be charged, conditioned, or replaced
  • Fuel cells are a promising new technology that
    could power a laptop for up to 40 hours before
    refilling

31
Battery Maintenance
  • Batteries should be stored in a cool place
  • Ni-Cd and Ni-MH batteries should be conditioned
    by using a charger
  • Battery contacts should be kept clean using a
    little alcohol or dry cloth
  • Used or old batteries should be recycled

32
Power Management
33
Power Management
  • Power Management must
  • Shut down unused devices selectively
  • Define a maximum period of inactivity
  • Shut down the entire system during longer periods
    of inactivity
  • Ready to restart if triggered by a wake-up event
  • Sensitive to potential hazards like shutting down
    the hard drive in the middle of a write operation
  • Keep the system cost about the same

34
System Management Mode
  • System Management Mode (SMM) is a set of features
    that enables the CPU to slow down or stop its
    clock without deleting the register information
  • Stops the CPU and all of the peripherals
  • Requires a specialized BIOS and OS
  • To further power management capabilities, Intel
    introduced Advanced Power Management (APM) in
    1992 and Advanced Configuration and Power
    Interface (ACPI) in 1996

35
Requirements for APM/ACPI
  • APM and ACPI require the following in order to
    function properly
  • An SMM-capable CPU
  • APM-compliant BIOS
  • Devices that will accept being shut off (Energy
    Star)
  • A system OS that knows how to request for the
    shut down of a particular device

36
APM/ACPI Levels
  • Full On
  • No power management everything running at full
    power
  • APM Enabled
  • CPU and RAM running at full power
  • Unused device may or may not be shut down
  • APM Standby
  • CPU is stopped
  • RAM still stores all the programs
  • All peripherals are shut down
  • APM Suspend
  • Everything is shut down or at its lowest
    power-consumption
  • Hibernation (stores everything in RAM on the hard
    drive before powering down)

37
APM/ACPI Configuration
  • CMOS settings
  • Windows
  • Overrides CMOS settings
  • Display applet in Control Panel
  • Settings?Advanced ?Monitor tab
  • Power Management applet in Control Panel

38
Configuration of APM/ACPI Windows
39
Cleaning Heat
  • Cleaning
  • Use a screen cleaner to clean the LCD screen (not
    a glass cleaner!)
  • Compressed air to clean out the keyboard and PC
    Card sockets
  • Heat
  • Use power management
  • Keep air space between the bottom of the laptop
    and the surface it sits on
  • Dont use a keyboard protector
  • Listen for your fan running a lot if it is
    allow your laptop to cool off

40
Beyond A
  • Intels Centrino Technology
  • Extremely low power
  • Fast CPUs
  • Integrated wireless networking
  • ExpressCard
  • Shorter than previous PC Cards
  • Same width as a Type II card

41
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