No, it's not.
what connector connects to the Intel p65 express
It is possible that dropping a laptop can destroy its hard drive. But it depends on the type of hard drive it used and how hard it drops. It is very possible that if you drop it hard enough to damage its hard drive that you may cause other damage.
It increases number of parallel lines to transfer from/to hard drive to/from CPU, memory or chipset.
Format all other drives instead of that conatain operating system
In the broadest sense, the motherboard sends data to the CPU. To be more specific, it would be the chipset, and particularly the northbridge.To follow the pathway, it works something like this. The user loads a program which is on the hard drive. The hard drive sends data to the hard drive bus controller which is connected to the southbridge of the chipset. Then that goes to the northbridge into memory and back, and from the northbridge to the CPU. Of course, some modern computers use a single chipset bridge, and in that case, the other components are inside the CPU.
It may help if you partition the drive first. You can't install it without an appropriate partition. There is also a slim chance that you have an unsupported chipset.
No. However, if you remove the hard drive, it can be used as a regular hard drive in a computer.
no
Thehardware subsystemis the chipset.The chipset is basically what interconnects and controls the pathways between the processor, RAM, video, and other devices like the hard drive and network card.If acomputer processor, RAM, andvideo controllerwere major cities, then the hardware subsystem (chipset) would be the roads and traffic lights (the chipset controls traffic flow) that connect them together. Other things, like the hard drive, DVD drive, and USB would be like the suburbs because they have slower, indirect access to the processor, ram and video controller.
The main drive is the drive with your operating system on it.
Yes, there is a company that specializes in hard drive repair. One of them would be DTI.
That's because the A200-ST2043 has a SATA hard drive. Windows XP has no built-in support for SATA hard drives. The simplest solution is to enter your BIOS and switch the chipset to operate in "IDE emulation" or "Legacy" mode. This will present the hard drive as an older IDE drive and allow Windows XP to see it.