This could vary as there are a number of motherboards that have that number.
It would be better to find this information either from your computer's manufacturer (for example Dell or Gateway) or by looking up the Intel AA (altered assembly) number.
AnswerIt could be a number of different types of RAM as there are a number of motherboards that have that number. It would be better to find this information either from your computer's manufacturer (for example Dell or Gateway) or by looking up the Intel AA (altered assembly) number.
The microprocessor determines how much RAM your computer can use
no ? i think ..
More often it is the motherboard which determines the Memory which can be in a PC.
Depending on what your motherboard can handle, all the RAM (regardless of clockspeed) will clock to the same speed.
Yes, as long as the motherboard is not picky about the RAM, it should work fine, but the motherboard will throttle the RAM to PC2100 speed if that is the fastest it supports.
yes, you can use the motherboard with another Processor and add the ram on it and everything else
The chipset and the motherboard are the primary determination here. In fact there have been motherboards available which can take a couple different kinds of ram (so you can go with whatever is cheap) although not at the same time, but with the same CPU. Pretty much, whatever your motherboard takes, that's what you've gotta use.
Depending on your motherboard it is most likely because most motherboards can only use one type of ram at a time. So you can only use ddr with more ddr to see more than one stick of ram.
Yes, if you are using IBM specific components (Processor, RAM, etc.) they will most likely not work seemlessly in another motherboard.
If the motherboard on your computer has some spare slots in it, you can buy RAM from most electronic hardware stores and either pay them to install it or install it yourself. If your motherboard DOESN'T have any spare slots then simply replace the current RAM with higher one. Make sure your purchase RAM compatible with your computer. Most computers today use DDR2 RAM while older computers (such as mine) use DDR RAM.
Modern laptops use what are called "SO-DIMM" modules. These are much shorter in length than desktop modules, and are not electrically or physically compatible with desktop memory. Some older laptops did indeed use desktop modules, but these are in the relative minority.