Yes you can. There's also an option in the CMOS setup to enable or disable this feature if your motherboard supports it.
It supports ddr (first generation - ddr1).
The msi is a 32-bit os so it will only support up to 2 gigs of ram
Depending on the specs of the motherboard, a motherboard that supports ECC SDRAM may support a non-ECC SDRAM module. If a motherboard can support both types, you would have the option to enable or disable the ECC feature in BIOS. Other than the fact that an ECC module has an odd number of chips, there is no other physical difference on the module. They are keyed the same.
No. A motherboard will specify what type of memory it supports. The DIMM slot for DDR,DDR2 and DDR3 have different footprints.
Windows XP doesn't directly determine what type of memory can be used; it depends on the motherboard. If the motherboard is compatible with Windows XP and the motherboard supports this memory module, then you can use it with Windows XP.
The Accellerated Graphics Port card uses memory completely separate from the motherboard memory. They don't mix. Make sure you use the memory that the AGP card nees in the AGP card, and memory that the motheroboard needs in the motherboard. If you do that, everything will be ok.
Harddrives will work as long as the motherboard supports the interface. SATA requires SATA. IDE requires an IDE port. Ram may or may not, that depends on the motherboard and if it supports the speed of your ram. USB drives should be fine. I'm not sure of the use of a memory card for computers...
No. RIMM only works with RD-Ram boards. Different memory have different pins
Random Access Memory, it is called main memory because processor only access data from RAM. Various types of RAM in market today, such as DDR, DDR2, DDR3. Different motherboard supports different RAM, but before purchase it you must choose maximum size and speed of RAM if your motherboard support.
macjine activites
ECC RAM memory.
it comes with PC3-12800 240pin DDR3