You PC should see the hard drive, if it doesn't or you don't have your quick boot shut off,
this way you don't see the post, then go into the bios and change your boot setting
to boot from this hard drive, or if you just want it too boot one time then at the start
of the PC, usually hit f8 or an f key that say when your PC starts, boot- use this key
and you can boot from which ever drive you want.
If you don't see the drive in the bios, something is wrong,either the card or drive is bad if it does not show.
There is a chance you might have to start your operating system and configure the drive under admin tools, computer management , storage.
Depends on the motherboard.
I believe so. I am researching that atm. I found that if you have an older sli mobo, and you use only one pcie video card, then the mobo might just turn off the 2nd pcie slot. But say you have onboard video and you need to use the 1 pcie slot for like a controller card, or NIC. I have a server with a pcie x16 slot. I am about to put a x1 sata controller in there. So wish me luck!
Hardware will be RAID PCIe / PCIx RAID hardware controller but The hardware RAID is often the motherboard RAID controller or a separate RAID card.
Only graphics cards are inserted into a PCIe x16 expansion slot.
PCIe
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PCIe or USB 2.0 bus standards.
A PCIe x16 graphics card will not work in a normal PCI slot. PCIe or PCI Express is a new standard in expansion interfaces. PCIe is physically and electronically incompatible with PCI slots.
A card which goes in a special slot in your computer
I presume that you mean to ask whether a PCIe 3.0 card can be used in a PCIe 2.0 slot on your motherboard. The answer to that question is yes. PCIe standards are all backward-compatible, so do not sweat that. For best performance, however, you would prefer to put a PCIe 3.0 card in the same type of slot.
A network interface card can be connected to a standard PCI slot or PCI-E slot. The choice of what slot to use is up to the person building the system and also based on what expansion slot is unused.
Witchcraft! No, in all actuality it will work completely fine, as long as they are both indeed PCIe. You should be good to go!