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No :) A chipset is an electronic chip located on the board which manages the motherboard and processes some data. A socket is a type of female plug on which you plug a removable electronic chip (CPU for example)
My friend, there is a thing, the main part of the system known as motherboard and there are certain "limitations" to every board...So what I wanna say is if you increase the RAM you will surely find some change in speed but the maximum amount of RAM that can fix on to a motherboard varies like you cant keep 2gb for a motherboard which can support 1gb ram ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The above data has some extra info too but I thoughtr you should know this!!! SIMPLY THE ANSWER IS YES
It is in the case, also referred to as the tower. When you look in it, the mother board is the biggest thing in there. All other cards and cables plug into the mother board which is why it is called the mother. Kind of like a mother ship.
There is no such thing as an "autoimmune system". There is only an immune system.Autoimmune diseases are caused when that immune system becomes "confused" and attacks parts of the body instead of disease causing agents.So your answer is false as there is no "autoimmune system" to activate.
Standoffs help to keep the motherboard from touching the case. If that were to happen, that could cause an electrical short and possibly damage the motherboard. Standoffs can also allow for air flow under the motherboard. Another thing of note is that they raise the board to the proper height so the peripheral cards and any connections on the back are in their proper places.
The only thing that affects the decision on RAM is a motherboard. Your motherboard can only support a certain type of RAM.
An advantage of a motherboard is that it provides us with a platform on which we can attach everything we need to make a computer. A disadvantage of a motherboard is a motherboard from a Windows 8 certified computer that has UEFI and Secure Boot enabled which in turn makes it hard (if not impossible to load another operating system like Red Hat or even Windows XP.
FALSE
All the devices in your computer go through your motherboard. Excluding things such as fans and lights, which apon occasion do.
Making a computer motherboard is not the sort of thing one could do at home. They are quite complex. The board itself has several layers, which allows a compact design and connecting tracks pass both sides and sometimes internally. They use Surface Mounted Devices (SMD) which generally require precise jigging and robot assembly. The soldering is done by floating the board on molten solder.The idea of a mother board could be used in other projects. Core components can be mounted on the board, then have lots of multiway sockets where other boards, with peripheral inputs and outputs, can be added and/or changed.
There is no such thing as a "motherboard driver." Motherboards are composed of several components, each of which needs its own driver. The drivers needed for the components can usually be downloaded from the manufacturer's site.
There is no such thing as a "motherboard driver." Motherboards are made up of several components, such as video, audio, Ethernet, and chipsets, each of which has their own driver.