A motherboard is only one part of that equations.However a great high end motherboard is the Asus P7P55D Motherboard.It will allow you to run multiple applications if you do everything else right.
The ASUS P7P55DX Deluxe Motherboard is generally a very good multi-tasking motherboard.
There are a number of softwares and programs that are used to detect the type of the motherboard. The CPU-Z software is the most commonly used software fr this purpose.
Most modern day gaming programs are supported by the XFX nForce 790i.
The easiest way is to open the computer case, and read what is written on the motherboard. Most of motherboards have model name written.
Most decompression programs can handle .RAR's but WinRar works. Google it.
You can check the motherboard and CPU temperature from within Windows using one of several tools. Some motherboard manufacturers will provide a utility for you to do this. You can also use SpeedFan, which supports the sensors on most motherboards.
It's limited by your motherboard on what CPU it can take. The list of supported processors is most likely listed in the manual.
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
which motherboard is most wide style implemented
It's either because you're running too many programs and background programs at once, or you don't have enough RAM; most likely it's the later. If you don't have the means to upgrade RAM, I would recommend limiting the amount of programs you have running at once.
Without knowing how your ram is configured, it's difficult to give more than general information. Usually the most noticeable improvement comes simply from adding more RAM. Current operating systems RAM for much more than running programs, and so giving the OS more room to work is the simplest most effective improvement. You can also increase the speed of the ram to whatever the motherboard and processor allow. You can also be certain that your ram is properly configured for hyperthreading if it's allowed by your motherboard.
Where word-processing and desktop-publishing programs begin to differ most noticeably is in the way the programs handle the integration of graphical elements and text elements.