The manufacturers website.
The motherboard is main part of CPU. All parts do connect with motherboard.
new technology file system
it is a new file system of microsoft to replace fat file system
Data Entry
Reverse key entry is where an operator enters a numeric entry on a ten key pad and then enters the same data in reverse order. This reduces operator keying errors. This only refers to a machine function, not a data entry job - Reverse Key or Reverse 10-key in data entry refers to the use of numbers within the letter keys. The original keypunch machines and early data entry terminals used what is now considered reverse key. The nine on the top row is the 0, U the 1, I the 2, O the 3, J the 4, K the 5, L the 6, M the 7, the common key is the 8 and the period key is the 9. To change from alpha to numerical the keyer holds down the shift key. Actually data entry is much easier with reverse key as it eliminates the transition from alpha keys to the numeric keypad.
NO. If you have a pci-x slot, probably it is a server, and you want to upgrade your graphics card, you can buy a PCI card and plug it into your PCI-X slot. It should work probably.
The answer after this one is absolutely incorrect. A PCI-e x1 card is absolutely compatible with a PCI-e x16 slot, regardless if it is a rev 1.0, 1.1, 2.0, 2.1, or even 3.0. It is indeed smaller, but that's one of the main reasons the ground pin / physical notching is present on these cards. It is safe to install so long as it is anchored.
x16 is compatible with x8, x4, and x1. It is this way, and it has always been this way.
----(Previous, incorrect answer)
No, it would be too small and may damage your motherboard and card.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PCI_Express#PCI_Express_2.0
Yes it should. The PCI Express 2.0 is backwards compatible with the PCI x16 1.0 and 1.1 slot motherboards. However, PCI-e 2.0 cards on 1.1 and 1.0 motherboards will not be able to run at their max capacity.
No, the CPU is the brains of the computer and interprets instructions received, equivaqlent to your brain responding to stimuli and selecting a course of action to follow. An equivalent analogy for the motherboard would be your neurological system. The motherboard, like neurotransmitters, receives and transmits messages to and from input/output sources (keyboard, mouse, etc.) to the CPU.
north and south bridge of a motherboard
its similar to an LPX motherboard .. but its smaller .. the LPX was designed to be slimline the ATX is designed to be mini ... i actually dont know im just guessing .. its a computer .. use it .. quit yapping
It varies from motherboard to motherboard. Motherboards with higher clocked RAM will tend to need higher watts and motherboards will older cpus or some of the newer quad cores will take even more watts.
It will run on 256Megabytes. But very slowly as it does a lot of disk swopping.
Memory is cheap. Get 1 Gigabyte.
I don't know if I have all of the information on how it works, but I do know some about how to do it. Well, first off, you need a PCI compatible motherboard. Second, you need 2 PCI compatible video cards. Then you stick them in the slots, then there is this thing that connects them together and that's Really all I know. For Further info, contact computer professional Logan at Logan@tiger.tv
Technically it's the other way around, everything (keyboard, monitor, printers, hard drives, etc.) are connected to the mother board.
Yes there are multiple controllers on all motherboards.
You cannot use a 2.0 pci express card in a pci express slot because the technology is newer.
For example:
It would be like putting a playstation 3 game into a playstation 2 console.
The one where you follow the RUURU!!
Im guessing your multiplier would be around 19x or so, you could check this by entering your BIOS at startup and checking in there.
Ususally to enter the BIOS you hit one of the following:
-Esc
-F2
-F10
-F12
-Delete
One of these usually enters the setup.
If it's a Dell computer, just about ALL the time, Dell is notorious for cracked motherboards. For all others......electrical surge frying some component, a cracked trace on the motherboard, a cracked solder joint. And just about any other time they don't know what is wrong.
what are the many files lines on the top and bottom of the motherboard surface
The Central Processing Unit (CPU) is the chip that actually performs the calculations that drive a computer. The motherboard is the board on which the CPU sits, and has the bus on which data is passed to the various input and output sources. Motherboards also usually contain slots for accessory cards (sometimes called daughterboards) such as a video card or network card.
The motherboard would be considered the nervous system, arteries and internal organs of a computer. The Central Processing Unit (CPU) would be considered the brain of a computer.
which motherboard is most wide style implemented