No
RAM can be part of the CPU.
cache
It can't.
no, it plugs into the motherboard. usually to the right of the CPU
The CPU talks to the RAM via the Front Side Bus (FSB.) The FSB is controlled by the Northbridge processor built into the computer's main board (Motherboard.) The Northbridge also manages your PCI_Express 16x slots, and integrated video cards.
For high-end gaming you would need a fast processor (CPU) fast and a lot of RAM and a fast video card that includes a lot of built-on RAM.
In certain applications, the overall speed may be dependent on the RAM. If you have a fast CPU but very little RAM then your performance will be slowed.
cpu
known as cache, it is embedded in the CPU on all modern chips (CPU's). the CPU RAM, or Cache, is a small amount (less than 50Kb) of very high speed ram. L1 and L2 cache is embedded in new CPU's so that the CPU can work out multiple parts of code, so that less fetch-process-verify-send procedures are made with the system ram, of which holds the whole program.
CPU front side bus RAM clock rate
The basic computer has two parts: Random Access Memory (RAM) and a Central Processing Unit (CPU.) A microprocessor is a CPU that is built on a single chip. RAM is a place where many bytes are stored. One of the things that can be stored in RAM is a series of "instructions" that tell the CPU what to do. The series of instructions is called a "program." The CPU "fetches" one instruction from RAM, "executes" that instruction, then fetches and executes the next one, and so on. Exactly what the instructions in the program tell the computer to do determines how the computer will act at any given time.
No. RAM is a type of memory, not data.