sort of... check here. http://www.gplsquared.com/SoM1/SoM1.html
i was working on one myself but went another route so it sits :D
This is some specification for RAM modules: DDR3 240-pin DDR 2 240Pin DDR 184 Pin SDRAM 168-pin SODIMM 200-pin DDR2 SODIMM 200-pin DDR,DDR2 and DDR3 have 2 holes SDRAM have 3 holes
depending on the laptop, it could be DDR, DDR2 or DDR3. But the form factor is all the same. Its all SO-DIMM memory
The question is broad so the answer is also they use sodimm,which are smaller modules in a 200 or 204 pin attachment....the newest would use DDR3,older DDR2 or DDR.The best way to check what you have is to find out the specs of your motherboard,with that information you could buy the right type and amount the motherboard could handle.....side note if your running Xp it can only handle 4 gig's of ram if your board supports that amount
No. SDRAM and DDR SDRAM are not compatible with each other.
The term DDR SDRAM refers to the phrase "double data rate synchronous dynamic random access memory". DDR SDRAM is simply a faster version of SDRAM in which data travels at a double rate. If your computer specs say that it uses DDR SDRAM it can take DDR SDRAM, but not SDRAM. DDR is 184 pins and has a notch in the bottom near the center and you will be unable to put DDR in an SDRAM mother board and also unable to put SDRAM in a DDR motherboard. Recently a new type of RAM has been introduced to market called DDR2. DDR2 is its own type and will not fit into a DDR motherboard. Hope this helps. Peace.
The Acer Aspire 5100 notebook used the 553 MHz or 667 MHz DDR2 SDRAM technology. Its maximum memory capacity was 4GB but one was able to expand it by installing 2 SODIMM modules.
function of sdram
Physical size of the memory card. Mobile sdram is smaller than sdram for desktops.
No. SDR SDRAM and DDR SDRAM modules are not interchangeable.
No.
Sdram has one notch. Depending upon the model of Sdram the number of pins it has can vary but a standard Sdram has 184 pins.
Five types of computer memory are: Dynamic Random Access Memory (DRAM) Synchronous DRAM (SDRAM) Static RAM (SRAM) Double Data Rate RAM (DDR) Rambus DRAM (RDRAM)