Yes, although it will perform much better with more RAM.
Obviously, the maximum you can fit on the motherboard. For a Pentium II, this will likely be only 256 MB to 512 MB.
I've yet to encounter an AT motherboard that supported a Pentium III processor. All the same, it is possible to run Solaris 10 on a Pentium III computer. You'll need at least 256 MB of RAM, however.
No. A Duron does not support AMD64 instructions, which are necessary to run a 64-bit operating system.
That will depend more on the motherboard and chipset used than the processor. Motherboards of that era would probably support between 256 and 768 MB of RAM, Most likely, the largest size modules you can use is 256 MB, so multiply that by the number of RAM slots and you'll have agood idea of how much your board supports.
Yes. Those distributions are targeted at more modern computers, though, and would not perform terribly well. A Xubuntu, Debian (with Xfce), SAM Linux, or Dreamlinux installation would have a more responsive GUI and use fewer resources.
The Pentium was technically capable of addressing up to 4 GB of RAM. Most chipsets for it only supported up to 256 MB, however.
This really depends on your definition of running well. It may be possible to use Microsoft Windows 2000 Pro on a P2 400mhz system, but your performance will suffer. If your intention is to run MS Windows 2000 Pro for day-to-day use, you should find a more powerful system to install the operating system on. If you intention is to use the older machine, you may want to install the operating system that came with the computer.
The basic initial specifications of the IBM ThinkPad T30 include an Intel Pentium 4-M 2.0 GHz processor, a minimum 256 MB memory, a 60 Gigabyte hard drive, an AGP 4x graphical processor, and a plug-in CD/DVD-rom drive.
I'm not even sure why it wouldn't run on my machine and here are my specs Syntax P4SVX400 mPGA478B Mainboard Pentium 4 CPU 1.8GHz/400MHZ FSB/256K Cache 1GB DDR PC3200 Ram Diamond Stealth S80 W/ATI Radeon 9200SE 500MHZ GPU W/128mb DDR SDVRAM Seagate Barracuda 7200 250GB Harddisk. Use Systemrequirementslab.com This site will tell you exactly how well your computer can handle the game. No you require atleast 1GB RAM to run the game properly.
128 on xp and 256 on wi7 ...open gl 2.0
A memory module. Your system would likely support between 1 and 4 memory slots (2 or three is the most common). In these slots, you could install up to a 256 MB module of PC133 SDRAM. If you purchase RAM, make sure you get what is called "low-density." Many eBay sellers try to sell "high density" memory, which is a slow and cheap RAM compatible with very few motherboards.
Intel designed the 8085 as a 8 bit computer, with the opcode byte as the first byte of the instruction. As such, there are only 256 possible values for the first opcode byte. (28 = 256) As implemented, Intel provided only 83 different instructions.It is possible, however, in general, that secondary opcode space be usable, so the "8 bit" rule might not necessarily apply, but Intel chose to not implement any of them on the 8085, like they did on the 8086/8088.