LGA1366, LGA771, and LGA775
I'm not sure about the third one, but I know two of them: LGA1155 LGA2011
The sockets are different, so by default, you cannot use them in a desktop. There are adapters for Pentium M and Celeron M chips to be used in Socket 478 motherboards. You can purchase motherboards specifically made to support mobile processors as well.
LGA775, LGA1155, and LGA1366 are the most common Intel sockets. However there are several more still being used, and some that Intel has just recently released; such as LGA1156, LGA2011, LGA1248, and LGA1567.
Socket 1366 Socket 1156 Socket 1155 Socket LGA 2011 are in use presently
775 - but almost phased out 1156 - for coewi3 nad core i5 1366 - for flagship i7 there are others for the xeon server chips (i think) but that's business and enterprise not consumer
The three socket used is available at my house, ali's house and sani's house. it used for playing PS2, on the kipas, and play laptop. it take time for 2 days tq~
LGA 775 processors are supported by LGS 775 sockets. Most, if not all, Intel processors are LGA 775, and almost no, if any, AMD processors are LGA 775. At www.newegg.com look up your processor and check the specifications to see what socket type it is.
Damaged sockets, leaky capacitors and electrostatic discharge due to dust.
CPU sockets (or CPU slots) in which one or more microprocessors may be installed
No. Xeon processors use different chipsets and sockets, thus they are not interchangeable with mainstream processors.
Only I7 CPU family, no other processors.
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)