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Summary OCR COMPUTER SCIENCE GCSE NOTES PT 1 (I will make more) $10.32   Add to cart

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Summary OCR COMPUTER SCIENCE GCSE NOTES PT 1 (I will make more)

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This document consists of a a section of a summary of GCSE Computer Science. This is not all of paper 1 content, and I am happy to make more parts so the full CS Paper 1 notes are done. I am currently a CS A-level student who managed to get a 8 in GCSE. I recommend students to use this especially a...

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  • October 14, 2023
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Computer science OCR GCSE notes pt 1



What is a computer?

- A computer is a device that stores data in the form of binary (zeros and ones) because it is
built from transistors, which are basically switches with two conditions (ON or OFF). A
computer has both hardware (cpu, ram, motherboard, graphics card) and software
(applications) with the purpose of doing general tasks.




What is an input device?

- A peripheral that transfers data into another device to be processed
- Examples of an input device: joystick, mouse, keyboard, microphone




What is an output device?

- A peripheral that transfers data out of a device to the user to understand
- Examples of an output device: monitor, speakers, printers




Hardware:

- What is it: physical and electrical components inside a computer system
- Examples: CPU, RAM, PSU, HDD/SSD



Software;

- All the programs and applications that runs on a computer. There are two types of software;
application software and system software.




The CPU – central processing unit:

What is it: It is a piece of hardware inside a computer that does the fetch-decode-execute cycle.



Parts of the CPU:

- MAR (memory address register) – holds the address of the instruction that is being fetched
- MDR (memory data register) – holds the data that will be fetched
- PC (program counter) – holds the next memory address

, - ALU (Arithmetic Logic Unit) –carries out any arithmetic (+,-,*,/), logical (and, or, not) or shift
operations
- Accumulator – holds the value from the ALU
- CU (control unit) – decodes, and executes instructions and controls the flow of data
- Cache: tiny but super-fast memory that’s purpose is to hold frequently used instructions


The fetch-decode-execute cycle (detailed):
- The memory address is copied into the MAR from the Program counter
- Instructions are fetched from main memory
- Those instructions are then copied to the MDR
- They are then decoded by the CU and finally executed
(The cycle repeats)




Simple descriptions of the fde cycle:

- Data is fetched from main memory
- Data is then decoded and execution occurs.




Features of the CPU that affects performance:

- Clockspeed – describes the number of fetch-decode-execute cycles occurring per second but
is noted in Hertz

- Cache size – bigger cache size will mean more memory will be stored there rather than RAM,
which has a significantly slower access time

- Number of cores – more cores enables parallel processing which is when multiple CPUs are
working simultaneously and this greatly speeds up a computer performance.




Virtual memory:

Virtual memory is often needed in a computer when there is insufficient space in RAM. VM causes
data that hasn’t been used recently to be moved to a hard drive or a solid-state drive. Virtual
memory does boost a computer’s performance. However, the disadvantages of using VM, is that it is
very slow in comparison to RAM, Cache, a CPU’s registers etc.

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