Basicly any motherboard that has a pci-e 2.0, 2.1 or 3.0 slot.
GDDR5 is just faster compared to a GDDR3 or just DDR5 DDR3
NO!! :)
Yes, it can. Some motherboards have an intergrated video card.
yes it,s very good for gaming
The video card, or the motherboards onboard video output.
Often times, motherboards that have the video card built-in will have to share video memory with system memory.
it is a port or a connection for a graphics card. It is the second version of PCI express with a speed of x16. To use a graphics card with this, you will need a PCIe 2.0 x16 port on your motherboard. Most modern motherboards have this.
Yes, at 4x speed.
There is no specific slot for a video card in modern motherboards. There are usually at least two PCI-E slots in which a high-performance video card can be installed. There are also usually some PCI slots for cheaper / older cards. Most desktop motherboards also have some form of graphics integrated into the motherboard.
You have not stated your motherboard model correctly. Some motherboards from mercury with the 845GL chipset support AGP, and some do not.
I would screw it into your case if you mean that type of support. Support also mean be "able to handle"... drivers for the correct video card would help you there.
System RAM and Video RAM are two separate technologies, and do not directly depend on each other. It is possible to run a video card with GDDR6 on a system with only DDR1 RAM installed, and just as possible to run a video card with GDDR1 on a system with DDR3 RAM installed. Having a high speed GDDR video card will improve rendering performance, while having high speed RAM will improve loading times.
Many motherboards with integrated video use a certain amount of system-RAM as your video RAM. If this is the case you may be able to go into BIOS and change how much RAM is being used for this purpose. Note that in these cases increasing video RAM will decrease the amount of system RAM.Other motherboards with integrated video have dedicated video RAM built-in. In these cases your only option is to replace the motherboard or, if the motherboard has an available expansion slot, disable onboard video & install a proper video card.