Yes, you can run stranded deep AMD A8 6600K Quad Core Processor CPU running at 3.9GHz
No, Because it's designed for a lower fsb (specifically, it's designed for a different fsb)
You need to upgrade pc hard drive. For instructions check out pcworld.com/article/2086644/how-to-upgrade-to-a-larger-hard-drive.html
If you can find a motherboard that can support both of them, yeah! SeanHolshouser
u already said the answer... 1600MHz=1.6GHz.
Hi, It's really Not much but Good for Gaming. Thanks Techvedic
My aunt's associate has a ram once... Courteous little SOB
it is good but it costs a bit more but in performance it's a bit better then the I6. so you decide its wheter u spend lots of time or a little on gaming
600 MHz or 800 MHz
My Gigabyte GA-Z68A-D3H-B3 with a i5 2600k @3.3GHz, GreenWatts 380 power supply, 4GB of 1600MHz ram, and Vertex 3 120GB ssd, using onboard intel graphics draws 42Watts at idle. The max I saw was 97Watts doing 4cores of cpu-bound work. I suspect the peak if I'm doing cpu + graphics processing + lots of disk will be a bit higher than that still. This is all running the latest Debian linux. Strangely sometimes the system gets into a 56Watt at idle state and I'm not sure how to get it back to 42W, but 40-100watts for a stripped down system is the ballpark. This was measured with a Kill-a-Watt wall plug power meter.
If by elements you mean the components inside, then: CPU (Stands for Central Processing Unit, e.g. Intel Core i7) RAM (Stands for Random Access Memory, e.g Corsair 8GB 1600MHz) A Video Card (Also called a Graphics card or GPU (Graphical Processing Unit) e.g. NVIDIA EVGA GeForce gtx 560 ti) A HDD (Stands for Hard Drive Disk, e.g. A Sandisk Barracuda) A MotherBoard (e.g. Asus M5A 78L-M LX V2) A PSU (Power Supply Unit, e.g. Xigmetek 500w) And a Case (e.g. Zalman z9 Plus)
no mts is 1600mhz cdma but nokia 2112 has only 800mhz cdma technology you can check also
The amount of RAM that is factory installed in a MacBook depends on the model of MacBook. In the latest models (May 2013), the 11 and 13-inch MacBook Airs have 4GB of 1600MHz DDR3L memory factory-installed, and the 13 and 15-inch MacBook Pros 4GB of 1600MHz DDR3 memory, all four models being configurable to 8GB. The 13 and 15-inch MacBook Pros with retina display, however, have 8GB of 1600MHz DDR3L memory factory-installed, this configurable to 16GB.