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JKSSB FAA Day 1 · Basic Applications of Computer
Welcome to Day 1 of the FAA Computer Mastery series on Chinar Prep — a 9-day arc designed to take you from zero to JKSSB-FPF-ready on the entire Computer section of the Financial Accounts Assistant syllabus. The 2026 FPF (Final Pattern Format) has reshaped the JKSSB Computer paper. The questions are no longer one-line trivia. They are scenario-based, J&K-flavoured, and they test whether you can actually recognise a computer's role in everyday and government workflows — not just recite definitions from a textbook. This Day 1 quiz is calibrated to that exact 2026 standard.
Day 1 covers Section 8.1 of the official JKSSB syllabus — Basic Applications and Components of Computers. The 30 questions are organised across three thematic blocks. Block A (Q1–Q10) covers the definition of a computer and its five characteristics — speed, accuracy, diligence, versatility, and storage — along with the GIGO principle, the input–process–output model, and the standard data hierarchy. Block B (Q11–Q22) covers the block diagram and components: CPU and its two sub-units (ALU and Control Unit), primary memory (RAM and ROM), secondary storage (HDD, SSD, optical, flash), and the standard input and output devices including keyboard, mouse, scanner, monitor, printer, and speakers. Block C (Q23–Q30) takes computers out of the textbook and into real J&K life — banking applications (ATM transactions, NEFT, RTGS, MICR cheque processing at J&K Bank branches), education (JKBOSE result portals, SWAYAM), healthcare (electronic health records at SKIMS Soura), government (PFMS at the J&K Finance Department, JaKeGA digital governance), and a few cross-sector matching questions that the FPF favours.
The difficulty mix on Day 1 is 9 easy, 15 medium, and 6 hard. The intent is to ease you into the series — Day 1 builds confidence and tests recognition, while Day 2 (Fundamentals of Computer Science) ramps up to harder calculation-heavy questions. Each question stem appears on screen with all four options. The narrator reads the question and the options out loud at a natural pace — no rushing, no shortcuts. After the options finish, a 5-second answer window opens. A soft tick beeps at every second so you always know how much time is left, then a final bell closes the window and the correct option lights up green while the wrong ones dim. There are no mid-question explanations breaking your flow; the green-or-dim reveal is the answer, and you can pause anytime to read the explanation card on screen if a question stings.
Use this as a real mock test, not a watch-along lecture. Sit upright, treat the timer like the actual CBT, attempt each question honestly inside the 5-second window, and only review your wrong answers at the end. If you score below 20 out of 30 on this Day 1 quiz, you need another pass on the Basic Applications notes in the Chinar Prep app before moving on. If you cross 25, you are FPF-ready on this sub-topic and can confidently roll into Day 2 (Fundamentals of Computer Science).
Where this fits in the bigger plan: the FAA Computer Mastery series is a 9-day arc covering all of Section 8 in the JKSSB FAA syllabus. Day 1 (this video) covers Basic Applications and Components — the surface layer of what computers are and where they appear in our lives. Day 2 dives one layer deeper into how computers actually represent and process information — number systems, two's complement, Boolean logic, computer generations, and the software hierarchy. Days 3 through 9 will continue with Operating Systems, MS Office (Word, Excel, PowerPoint), Computer Networks and the Internet, basic Cyber Security, and a final revision pass. Each day ships with its own 30-question quiz video on this channel, and the in-app version on Chinar Prep includes the full HTML notes for every topic, sectional mock tests, and a master full-length test that pulls 25 Computer questions across the entire 9-day pool.
By the end of these 20 minutes you will have practised: the precise textbook definition of a computer; the five characteristics with examples of where each shines; the GIGO principle; the IPO model (input, processing, output); the standard CPU block diagram with ALU and Control Unit; the difference between primary and secondary memory and where RAM, ROM, HDD, SSD, optical, and flash storage each fit; the role of every common input and output device; banking-sector applications with real J&K Bank examples; e-Governance applications across J&K Finance, JKBOSE, SKIMS, and JaKeGA; and a clutch of FPF-style matching and multi-statement questions on which sector each system primarily serves.
#JKSSBFAA #FAAExam #JKSSB #ChinarPrep #JKExams #JKSSBPreparation #ComputerKnowledge #BasicApplicationsOfComputers #ComputerComponents #CPU #InputOutputDevices #BankingApplications #GIGO #BlockDiagram #JammuAndKashmir #JKBank #JKSSBMockTest #FAAComputerMastery #CrackJKSSB #JKAspirants #SarkariNaukri #JKGovtJobs #Day1
Видео JKSSB FAA Day 1 · Basic Applications of Computer канала Chinar Prep
Day 1 covers Section 8.1 of the official JKSSB syllabus — Basic Applications and Components of Computers. The 30 questions are organised across three thematic blocks. Block A (Q1–Q10) covers the definition of a computer and its five characteristics — speed, accuracy, diligence, versatility, and storage — along with the GIGO principle, the input–process–output model, and the standard data hierarchy. Block B (Q11–Q22) covers the block diagram and components: CPU and its two sub-units (ALU and Control Unit), primary memory (RAM and ROM), secondary storage (HDD, SSD, optical, flash), and the standard input and output devices including keyboard, mouse, scanner, monitor, printer, and speakers. Block C (Q23–Q30) takes computers out of the textbook and into real J&K life — banking applications (ATM transactions, NEFT, RTGS, MICR cheque processing at J&K Bank branches), education (JKBOSE result portals, SWAYAM), healthcare (electronic health records at SKIMS Soura), government (PFMS at the J&K Finance Department, JaKeGA digital governance), and a few cross-sector matching questions that the FPF favours.
The difficulty mix on Day 1 is 9 easy, 15 medium, and 6 hard. The intent is to ease you into the series — Day 1 builds confidence and tests recognition, while Day 2 (Fundamentals of Computer Science) ramps up to harder calculation-heavy questions. Each question stem appears on screen with all four options. The narrator reads the question and the options out loud at a natural pace — no rushing, no shortcuts. After the options finish, a 5-second answer window opens. A soft tick beeps at every second so you always know how much time is left, then a final bell closes the window and the correct option lights up green while the wrong ones dim. There are no mid-question explanations breaking your flow; the green-or-dim reveal is the answer, and you can pause anytime to read the explanation card on screen if a question stings.
Use this as a real mock test, not a watch-along lecture. Sit upright, treat the timer like the actual CBT, attempt each question honestly inside the 5-second window, and only review your wrong answers at the end. If you score below 20 out of 30 on this Day 1 quiz, you need another pass on the Basic Applications notes in the Chinar Prep app before moving on. If you cross 25, you are FPF-ready on this sub-topic and can confidently roll into Day 2 (Fundamentals of Computer Science).
Where this fits in the bigger plan: the FAA Computer Mastery series is a 9-day arc covering all of Section 8 in the JKSSB FAA syllabus. Day 1 (this video) covers Basic Applications and Components — the surface layer of what computers are and where they appear in our lives. Day 2 dives one layer deeper into how computers actually represent and process information — number systems, two's complement, Boolean logic, computer generations, and the software hierarchy. Days 3 through 9 will continue with Operating Systems, MS Office (Word, Excel, PowerPoint), Computer Networks and the Internet, basic Cyber Security, and a final revision pass. Each day ships with its own 30-question quiz video on this channel, and the in-app version on Chinar Prep includes the full HTML notes for every topic, sectional mock tests, and a master full-length test that pulls 25 Computer questions across the entire 9-day pool.
By the end of these 20 minutes you will have practised: the precise textbook definition of a computer; the five characteristics with examples of where each shines; the GIGO principle; the IPO model (input, processing, output); the standard CPU block diagram with ALU and Control Unit; the difference between primary and secondary memory and where RAM, ROM, HDD, SSD, optical, and flash storage each fit; the role of every common input and output device; banking-sector applications with real J&K Bank examples; e-Governance applications across J&K Finance, JKBOSE, SKIMS, and JaKeGA; and a clutch of FPF-style matching and multi-statement questions on which sector each system primarily serves.
#JKSSBFAA #FAAExam #JKSSB #ChinarPrep #JKExams #JKSSBPreparation #ComputerKnowledge #BasicApplicationsOfComputers #ComputerComponents #CPU #InputOutputDevices #BankingApplications #GIGO #BlockDiagram #JammuAndKashmir #JKBank #JKSSBMockTest #FAAComputerMastery #CrackJKSSB #JKAspirants #SarkariNaukri #JKGovtJobs #Day1
Видео JKSSB FAA Day 1 · Basic Applications of Computer канала Chinar Prep
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