No, a Motherboard is purchased with nothing included unless you purchase a package deal (where you get Motherboard, Processor and Ram as a kit.)
ddr3 is a type of ram you would find on the motherboard of a computer. only motherboards that are manufactured for ddr3 ram will hold ddr3 ram.
ddr3 is a type of ram you would find on the motherboard of a computer. only motherboards that are manufactured for ddr3 ram will hold ddr3 ram.
Most current motherboards are using DDR3 SDRAM, although new higher-performing motherboards are starting to appear which use DDR4.
Most Pci-express x16 2.0 compatible motherboards
socket l775 its compatible with it
You purchase ram seperately from the motherboard, so you can have 4 GB of ram on any motherboard that supports Intel processors.
The FRU components of an older AT motherboard are: Processor, RAM, RAM cache, ROM BIOS chip and CMOS battery.
To supply power to Fans, Drives, Motherboards, processors, Ram.
Combo motherboards are those which support both DDR2 and DDR3 RAM. However, only one type of RAM should be used at a time.
You need to reword your question... I am assuming that you are asking which motherboards for Intel chips support the most RAM. I say this because Intel manufactures a super limited number of motherboards; moreover, these motherboards are not considered to be top notch compared to major brands such as ASUS or GIGABIT. ASUS, for instance, makes motherboards that support Intel and AMD chips -- to put it simply. Now on to the second part of your question... "which support the most RAM" Sadly, this question is poor too: you could be asking "how much RAM" or "how many different types of RAM" Because of this dilemma, I will answer both. Most Intel-based motherboards hold up to 8 Gigabytes of RAM, and some can hold up to 32 Gigabytes depending on make. Now, any one motherboard only "supports" one type of RAM; meaning, that the motherboard runs optimally on that very specific RAM type, but that's not to say that it can't use other RAM types in the same family (SDRAM, for instance), it just wont be able to take full advantage of the other types.
PC133 Ram and PC333 ram are generally incompatible. PC133 RAM is SDR Ram where as PC333 is DDR RAM. Some motherboards support using either SDR or DDR but this is not usual. PC133 will not fit in the same slot as PC333.
Motherboards are pretty much manufactured the world around. Most for PC's come from China, Taiwan, Korea, India, Japan, Malaysia and the such. Motherboards for US weapon systems are made in the US. Many European countries make motherboards.