| Input Devices : Summary |
| 1.  An input device transfers data from the outside world into a computer.  
| 2.  | There are two different categories of input device. They are :
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| Manual Input Devices | ||||
| Input Device | Example Use | Advantage | Disadvantage | |
| QWERTY Keyboard | Word processing. | Typists can use with ease to enter any textual data. | Relatively slow. | |
| Concept Keyboard | Children's toys, tills in restaurants / pubs. | Can be operated by novices or people who can not manage a normal keyboard. | Needs to be customised for each application. | |
| Touch Screen | Information system in tourist office window. | Can be used where a mouse or keyboard might get wet or dirty. | Tiring to keep touching screen. | |
| Light Pen | Drawing on screen. | Cheap to manufacture. | Extremely inaccurate and awkward to use. | |
| Mouse | Moving a pointer on screen. | Easy for novices to use for drawing or to choose options off the screen. | Requires a lot of space to use. | |
| Tracker Ball | Moving a pointer on screen. | Does not need as much space as a mouse. | Not as intuitive to use as a mouse. | |
| Touch Pad | Moving a pointer on screen. | Does not need as much space as a mouse. | Not as intuitive to use as a mouse. | |
| Joystick | Playing games or controlling robots. | Allows fast, natural directional interaction needed for games. | Not as accurate as a mouse for selecting options from screen. | |
| Graphics Tablet | Producing technical drawings. | Allows digitising of images with great accuracy. | Expensive unless you use it a lot. | |
| Scanner | Transferring printed images onto a computer. | Cheap and fast method of getting graphics into a computer. | Images take up a lot of storage space. | |
| Digital Camera | Including photographs in newsletters and DTP work. | No film required, no delay getting negatives processed. | Camera can only store a limited number of images, resolution is usually not very good. | |
| Video Capture | Reads still or moving video images into computer. e.g. Video Digitiser, Webcam. | Can capture moving images. | Captured video files require a lot of storage space. | |
| Voice Recognition (Microphone) | Telephone banking, automatic dictation. | Can be operated by inexperience users, can be used remotely by telephone. | Can only understand a few words or one person. | |
| MIDI | Input and output of music via instruments. | Quicker and easier than entering music through computer keyboard. | Instruments and computer require MIDI ports. | |
| Remote Control | Operating a TV from remote location. | More convenient than having to move to TV to operate it. | Can be lost, some controls do not work all functions of device. | |
| Biometric Devices | Security applications where a person must be identified by fingerprint/iris e.g. passport. | More reliable identification than password, signature etc. | People are worried about personal data stored about them being misused. | |
| Sensors | Control systems. | Many types available, automatic input of physical quantities. | May require calibration. | |
| Direct Data Entry (DDE) Devices | ||||
| Input Device | Example Use | Advantage | Disadvantage | |
| Barcodes | Supermarket stock control. | Quick and easy to enter data under non-ideal condition, cheap to print bar-codes. | Only numbers can be stored in bar-codes. | |
| Magentic Ink Character Recognition | Reading information from cheques. | Very fast and secure : numbers can not be changed by overwriting and not damaged by folding. | Expensive to buy reader and ink. | |
| Magnetic Stripe Codes | Used to store a small amount of information on the back of credit cards | Simple and cheap to produce. | Can be damaged by magnetic fields or scratching. | |
| Smart Cards | Petrol station points cards, satellite TV decoder cards, debit cards. | Can store a lot of information. | People worried about what information could be stored. | |
| Optical Mark Recognition | Marking exam scripts, lottery tickets. | Fast and accurate. | Instructions have to be followed exactly by person marking the form. | |
| Optical Character Recognition | Used to read printed text into the computer, reading postcodes to sort letters. | Fast method of reading text into a computer. | Not 100% accurate, OCRed documents must be checked manually. | |
| 5.  A turnaround document is a document which :
| 6.  | A Portable Data Entry Terminal (PDET) is a handheld computer that can be used to enter data into a computer system as an alternative to a turnaround document. |
(C) P Meakin 2004