100MHz sounds like an archaic 486 DX4 or a very early Pentium CPU. I would imagine that you would use ISO or EDO RAM. Finding such memory would be rare and very expensive. Not to mention that I've never seen a RAM stick of that type that exceeded 32Mb and I'm sure it would be over $100 if you can find any. You can buy a USB flash drive for $10 with 500 times that amount of memory. The only memory I would give to your board would be a distant one by virtue of a Frisbee toss at the local landfill.
The SDRAM PC100 means that the modules should be rated to work with a motherboard that runs at 100 MHz.
1. 100MHz SDRAM.
SDRAM TheRockStar
A dimm slot on a computer motherboard is used to add extended memory or Ram ( random access memory ) all motherboards have a minimum and maximum amount of memory and memory speed which can be used.The more memory in a computer system the greater the performance especially for video rendering and other high end tasks. Computer motherboards have different types of dimm slots which use different types of memory and memory speeds. examples are Sd ram uses 168 pin motherboard dimm slots of memory speed 100mhz or 133 mhz Ddr ram uses 184 pin motherboard dimm slots of memory speeds of 266 mhz to 400mhz Ddr2 ram uses 240 pin motherboard dimm slots of memory speeds of 533 to 1200mhz Ddr 3 ram uses 240 pin motherboard dimm slots of memory speeds of 1333mhz upwards Each motherboard has a notch in the dimm slot so the wrong type of memory can not be installed in the wrong motherboard. Example ddr3 memory will not fit in a ddr2 memory motherboard.when upgrading memory persons should find the required memory type and memory speed from the motherboard manufacturer specifaciations data to ensure full compatibility. The faster the memory speed and the greater the memory amount the faster the computer system
Windows XP doesn't directly determine what type of memory can be used; it depends on the motherboard. If the motherboard is compatible with Windows XP and the motherboard supports this memory module, then you can use it with Windows XP.
The BIOS is part of the motherboard memory that is for many cases nonprogrammable and is used to boot up a computer system.
RAM
ROM (Read Only Memory) Also, depending on motherboard design, RAM (Random Access Memory) and with modern computers SSDs (Solid State Drive) chips can also be located on the motherboard or plugged into it directly.
sdram
You can use AGP graphics card with any type of memory DDR. DDR2, DDR3. Graphics card memory type does not have any relation with memory type used on your PC's motherboard. - Neeraj Sharma I believe this answer is incorrect. I have found that some motherboards have onboard graphics which are connected to the pci slots. This creates a connection with a PCI graphics card, and the differences in RAM type will indeed cause problems for the driver and the OS. Bill Newman
sure; CPU used to memory for processing data. it use mother board cache memory and it also use ram memory.
it is used to connect expansion cards to the Motherboard
No, unless you want more memory and have exceeded the amount that one slot is able to carry
If you mean RAM. then you may transfer it, but the new motherboard must support the same type of RAM.
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.