Ya sure you shall go for it It will run at the slower clockspeed though, but not a big issue.
No, DDR and DDR2 are different types of memory. DDR2 supports higher speeds and has different socket. Check your laptop manufactore website to find out which type of memory your laptop works with.
Absolutely. Considering your new computer's motherboard supports the same type of ram. I'm assuming you have a ddr2 ram compatible computer and that your purchasing a new computer with a ddr2 compatible motherboard.
The type of RAM your motherboard supports can only use that type and no other. If you have DDR2, you can not place a DDR or DDR3 module. If you mean can the game run the same on another system with different RAM, then quite possibly, but the speed of that memory may not be suitable for it.
No, you can't use same DIMM slots for DDR2 and DDR3 due to different position of the key and interface incapability.
There are both the same thing, ddr2 ram, is faster that ddr1 ram but ddr3 ram is more modern and faster
well...Depending on what you mean by powerful, that mean a lot of different things. I will assume you mean faster in this case. DDR1 and DDR2 are very similar when it comes down to it, but DDR2 transfers data at twice the speed compared to DDR1, assuming the clock speeds are the same. DDR2 has higher clock speeds most of the time, and therefore will be even faster than that.
The type of memory used by the graphics card. DDR1 is slower, DDR2 is faster. They both plug into the same slot in your computer.
SD ram is synchronized with the with the system clock and runs at the same speed as your computer. DDR2 is random access memory that is used for high speed storage of the working data of a computer.
That would have very bad results.The two are not compatible.
You cannot convert an existing motherboard to DDR2. As The Intel Pentium D was actually designed for motherboards with DDR2 RAM (you must have gone out of your way to purchase one with DDR RAM), it should be no problem to move the processor to another board.
Yes. For example the iMac uses PC2-5300 DDR2 SO-DIMM SDRAM memory.
# 4 DDR II DIMM memory slots (supports up to 4GB memory) # Supports 1.8V DDR II DIMM # Supports dual channel DDR II 667/533 DIMM # DDR2 PC5300/PC4200 # 512MB or 1GB Modules # Install like memory in each channel for Dual Channel operation # If only 2 DIMMS installed, place in same channel (slot color) for Dual Channel, if installed in adjacent slots, memory will run in single mode.