dell has the best support
Yes, depending on the motherboard. Most Pentium 4 chipsets support up to 4 GB of RAM, although the motherboard may not physically support enough RAM modules.
ATX motherboards are best suited to providing legacy slots and ports (such as PCI).
In order to upgrade SDRAM with DDR, you will need to replace your motherboard. DDR uses a different slot than SDRAM, so if your motherboard is using SDRAM currently, you will most likely have to replace your motherboard in order to make your system support DDR.
A server mother is like a normal motherboard except they are geared to a server processor and can hold more than one processor usually. They also support ECC memory which is memory with error correction. They support RAID. And most can are slim to be put in what is called a U1 chassis so they can go on a server rack.
Pretty sure this motherboard uses the LGA 1366 socket. This slot is used for most of the i3-i7 line of Intel processors, which are all multi-core processors. Yes it will support multi-core processing!
HP themselves do not manufacture motherboards. Most mother boards now will easily support resolutions of 1200x800.
which motherboard is most wide style implemented
There is no such thing as a "motherboard driver." Motherboards are composed of several components, each of which needs its own driver. The drivers needed for the components can usually be downloaded from the manufacturer's site.
That depends on your motherboard. Most Prescott motherboards did not support DDR2 RAM.
I am certain that you will find that she is most kind.
Just below where the CPU is located under a heat sink. Although most modern motherboard don't have north bridges and south bridges and instead are combined into a single chipset.
Most likely, but not necessarily. It all depends on what kind of motherboard you have. Most modern motherboards require SATA cables to connect to storage devices, but there are some that can still use a PATA (also known as IDE) cable for HDDs. Regarding SSDs, most of them connect to motherboards through SATA cables, but there are some that can be connected to the motherboard through a PCIe X4 slot.