The NIC on that motherboard, a Realtek RTL8111, is already supported in Fedora's kernel.
A pci and a pci-e are different ports. I would say no for sure. http://www.whatthetech.com/2007/11/10/can-pci-express-graphic-card-work-in-pci-slots/
Intel Pentium 4 530 (3GHz, 1MB) Processor 512MB PC3200 DDR Memory 200GB 7,200rpm Hard Drive 16x DVD+/-RW Burner Intel High Definition Audio Intel GMA 900 Integrated Graphics and GigaPocket MPEG2 Encoder+TV Tuner v.90 56Kbps Modem and 10/100 Ethernet Seven USB 2.0, Two iLink (FireWire) and 8-in-1 Media Reader One PCI Express x16 and Two PCI Slots Windows XP Home, MS Works 8, Sony Digital Suite, GigaPocket, WinDVD, Norton Internet Security
ALOT more then just 10 can connect to a normal mother board Hard Drive CD-ROM Drive Processor RAM KeyBoard Mouse Monitor USB Fans Floppy Driver 20-24 Pin Power cord 4 - 6 Pin processor power cord for some computers SATA cord for SATA for some computers ( some mother boards dont have SATA connecters) PCI X1 slot... RAM Driver... Graphics Card... Converter to PCI X16 or PCI Express or almost any thing now days... but PCI X1 is slower then most Slots like... PCI X16 or PCI Express can do ... Internet cable connecter ... Phone connecter ... but just about any extra hardware item you want that connecter size PCI X16 or Express will connect to it like extra Processor or Graphics card or even extra RAM slots on the card hope this helps :)
Prior to the current PCI Express slots, most peripherals were connected to a PC via PCI slots. PCI is a shared bus. These peripherals could have included a graphics card, a network 10/100LAN card, a sound card, a MIDI card etc. Intel first introduced boards that could connect a graphics card separately through a dedicated slot called an Accelerated Graphics Port (AGP). So only a compatible graphics card could be connected there. This was done for performance/bandwidth reasons where AGP provided more performance/bandwidth when compared to a PCI slot. However, with the introduction of PCIE, where lanes and generations provided leapfrogging performance, AGP was obviated on the platform as the cost of supporting an extra port outweighed the benefits of a universal standard slot that could accept any peripheral, not just graphics cards!
I'll meet you at your 10-20 after the morning intel dump.
Yes, Apple does make Intel bases Mac computers starting January 10, 2006.
The Express was released on 10/04/2008.
I don't think so
Horror Express was created in 1972-10.
Iberia Express was created in 2011-10.
All right, Here I go: 1. PCI-Express Slot - Newer MOBOS 2. AGP Slot - Older MOBOS 3. CPU Socket 4. RAM Slots 5. SATA Sockets - Newer MOBOS 6. IDE Sockets/Slots - Older MOBOS 7. BIOS Chip 8. PCI Expansion Slots 9. Communication Ports 10. Power Connector . . . . . . . theres much much more if u want All right, Here I go: 1. PCI-Express Slot - Newer MOBOS 2. AGP Slot - Older MOBOS 3. CPU Socket 4. RAM Slots 5. SATA Sockets - Newer MOBOS 6. IDE Sockets/Slots - Older MOBOS 7. BIOS Chip 8. PCI Expansion Slots 9. Communication Ports 10. Power Connector . . . . . . . theres much much more if u want