Only I7 CPU family, no other processors.
LGA Sockets, most often used by Intel place the CPU Pins in the motherboard instead of on the CPU. For your viewing pleasure: PGA Sockets place the pins on the CPU BGA Sockets solder the CPU to the motherboard, and use rounded beads instead of obvious pins Slot Sockets look and behave in a manner similar to PCI, and have card slot arrays instead of individual pins DIP Sockets place the pins only on the outer edges of the chip. These are old and crude. PLCC Sockets have metal fins on all four sides, with a small chip that fits inside. This chip has receiving points that are flat against the chip, giving them an appearance similar to that of a game cartridge. (Some New BIOS chips still use this. Little chip nested inside of a brown plastic square) Think thats about it, though I'm sure there's a socket type I missed somewhere!
Each model motherboard is different but most have power, fan, cpu, ide, floppy, AGP, PCI, RAM. The new generation SATA boards are different again
Generally yes, but it depends on the building codes in your area. Homes that have not been updated may have the older two prong sockets. All newer homes will have the three prong or grounded sockets. Any new construction would require three pronged sockets.
Try selecting "Opt Out" to get out of the new eBay beta style, as this has been shown to cause high CPU load in older computers.
No, the processor that you put on the motherboard has to have the same socket as the motherboard. The socket number will be right on the the part that the processor snaps onto. You also have to check the motherboard manual to see if it is compatible with the new processor speed ( example: 1.3ghz)
If your CPU is fried then you need to get a new CPU to turn your computer back on.
You will need a new CPU,as well as the booting software
Older versions used a processor called PowerPC made by power.org New versions use Intel.
No, because the new iPad has magnets and the older one doesn't.
It depends on what kind of motherboard you have. More details are needed for the answer. == Just plug 'LGA775 and IDE motherboard' into Google or another search engine and check out what motherboards are around. ASUS, MSI, DPI and Gighabyte boards with your requirements are readily available. NOTE: as most dual core (LGA775) sockets are now more commonly on (better spec) SATA boards a PCI IDE controller or a direct IDE to SATA converter will be required, if a SATA board is your choice.
It depends on the CPU, the older ones with a lower amount of cores tend to not work so well on sony vegas. The phenom ii's and the new amd's and intel's tend to do the job, but more cores is better for video editing.
You don't. The CPU is your processor. You can transfer files to a new HDD, one of the easiest ways is to slave up your old drive and copy everything over.