yes i am using it it supports
You purchase ram seperately from the motherboard, so you can have 4 GB of ram on any motherboard that supports Intel processors.
The Intel D845GLLY motherboard supports a maximum of 2GB of PC133 SDRAM, using two 1 GB modules.
An Intel atom processor will support at around 2 gb of ram
Yes it does, with a ddr2 ram
The Intel Pentium 3 typically supports SDRAM (Synchronous Dynamic RAM), specifically PC100 and PC133 types. Depending on the motherboard, it may also support different configurations of modules, including DIMMs (Dual In-line Memory Modules) and SO-DIMMs (for laptops). The maximum supported RAM varies by motherboard, but it's usually up to 1 GB or 2 GB in total.
The processor is capable of addressing up to 4 GB of RAM. Chipset / motherboard limitations may make the possible max for a system less than that.
2 GB of RAM 160 GB HDD
64 GB of RAM.
what is the rate of two 2 gb ram 800 mhz? and what is the rate of 500 gb hard disk, Intel core to duo 2.8 ghz ,Intel motherboard 856 ,and samsung 23 " lcd monitor
up to 16gb of RAM and up to 16TB of VM
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.
if your server is intel then never change this and 128 ram is better then 64 i an suggest you from my experience