P1 motherboards are "Socket 7", it should be written on the CPU socket. Also, they only have PCI and ISA expansion slots, AGP and PCI-E Video cards slots never appear on a P1 motherboard. The ram slots may be either 72-pin or 168-pin 'Dimm' slots (on desktop motehrboards, laptop boars could have either of these or 144-pin So-Dimm.
Well, one way is to read the model number on the board, and check the specifications for that particular board.
identy p2motherboard
Da biggest one ;)
If you spot the processor, it should be labeled right on there with a P4 or a PII just check the processor type and this could tell you the difference
Let p1 and p2 be the two prime numbers. Because they are prime, their divisors are div(p1) = {1,p1} and div(p2) = {1,p2}. So GCD(p1,p2) = Greatest Common Divisor of p1 and p2 = p1 if p1 equals p2 1 if p1 is different from p2
Communication between the CPU and the RAM and PCI Express slots
The composition of Buffer P2 is:200 mM NaOH1% SDS (w/v)Buffer P2 is the lysis buffer
The Manuafacturer should be labeled someone on the motherboard. The model number is generallly wrote to the right of the CPU and to the left of the memory vertically.
you can use software to identify the hardware onboard (such as cpuz)
No. Let p1 be a prime number. Let p2 be a multiple of p1 such that p2 = p1 * k. Then the factors of p2 are: 1, p1, k and p2. ==> p2 is not a prime number. Hence, a multiple of a prime number cannot be a prime number.
A P2 costs $9.00 per user/month.
p2+10d+7
p2 + 3p = p (p + 3)
p2 - 25 = (p - 5)(p + 5)