computer full form
NO pci-e only agp4x no 8x. you have an ecs board. http://www.motherboards.org/mobot/motherboards_d/ECS/P4VXASD/
Most likely, but not necessarily. It all depends on what kind of motherboard you have. Most modern motherboards require SATA cables to connect to storage devices, but there are some that can still use a PATA (also known as IDE) cable for HDDs. Regarding SSDs, most of them connect to motherboards through SATA cables, but there are some that can be connected to the motherboard through a PCIe X4 slot.
Any PCIe x16 V1.0a, V1.1 or V2.0 card. Boom!
it is a port or a connection for a graphics card. It is the second version of PCI express with a speed of x16. To use a graphics card with this, you will need a PCIe 2.0 x16 port on your motherboard. Most modern motherboards have this.
yes, if your motherboard supports crossfire and your graphics cards support eyefinity (at least 3 of your monitors will need to support display port, or you will need to purchase active adapters for them)
Primary PCIe slot
New cards that support PCIe 2.0 are backward compatible with PCIe 1.1, thus you can install latest PCIe 2.0 cards on x16 PCIe slot of current or older motherboards. Latest PCIe 2.0 standards offer double the bandwidth of current PCIe 1.1 standards. The majority of single graphics cards are yet fast enough to fully take advantage of the wider bandwidth of PCIe 2.0. It is the multi-GPU or the multi-card set up that benefit most from PCIe 2.0. PCIe 2.0 and PCIe 1.1 use the x16 PCIe slot format but the PCIe 2.0 slot is capable of sustaining 150 watts while the PCIe 1.1 slot is only capable of 75 watts max. PCIe 3.0 is electrically compatible with previous generations but uses a different encoding scheme to increase the throughput.
No. You will need to replace your motherboard to get PCI-E.
type of chipset
Most likely for dual graphics cards.
A gaming motherboard should have at least two PCIe slots for Crossfire or SLI video cards.
300 watts