assuming the older mother board has similar sockets and slots for your current devices parts
(and your motherboard supports those devices) you should have no problem downgrading
The difference between BIOS and UEFI is built into the motherboard chipset; you cannot change an existing motherboard from BIOS to UEFI, all you can do is replace the entire motherboard (and probably the CPU and the RAM as well) with an UEFI based motherboard. (Deleted the previous answer in its entirety because it was compl Save etely incorrect)
no
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.
riser
Buy a new motherboard and replace the old by the PC engineer that fixed the same PC unit.
In order to upgrade SDRAM with DDR, you will need to replace your motherboard. DDR uses a different slot than SDRAM, so if your motherboard is using SDRAM currently, you will most likely have to replace your motherboard in order to make your system support DDR.
Let the Bios see the drive as a smaller drive Upgrade the bios Replace the motherboard Use software that interfaces between the older bios and the newer drive Use an ATA Controller card to provide the ATA connector and firmware substitute for the motherboard bios
BIOS stands for Basic Input/Output system. UEFI stands for Unified Extensible Firmware Interface. BIOS deals with Hardware device code but UEFI deals with the firmware level.
No. You would need to replace the entire motherboard.
Yes, it is possible to replace your motherboard with new one. Just make sure that your new motherboard fits in your computer, and that it support all of the hardware you had on your old motherboard.
$200
NO both were indipendent