The fast end of the hub, called the North bridge, contains the graphic and memory controller, and connects directly to the processor by way of 64- bit bus, called the Front Side Bus (FSB), System Bus or host bus.
Sandy Bridge chipset with the memory and graphics controller in the processor. Sandy bridge chipsets include X79, P67, H67, Q65,Q67, and B65.
This was the Sandy Bridge chipset. This helped to make things a little bit simpler for the graphics in the computer.
Which type of intel chipsets was the first to support the graphics controller to be part of the processor
sandy bridge chipsets
== == The Intel® 915G Express chipset, designed for the Intel® Pentium® 4 processor supporting Hyper-Threading Technology† in the LGA775 package, delivers a decade's worth of innovation:PCI Express* buses can deliver over 3.5 times more bandwidth for I/O and graphics cards than PCI and AGP 8X respectively1.Graphics flexibility, with support for the built-in Intel® Graphics Media Accelerator (GMA) 900 and for PCI Express graphics cardsFlexible memory support for dual channel DDR2 533 memory and dua-channel DDR memoryThe Intel® 865G chipset, designed for the Intel® Pentium® D processor (compatible with the lead free version of Intel® 865G Chipsets supporting socket LGA775) and the Intel® Pentium® 4 processor supporting Hyper-Threading Technology†, is a highly flexible and scalable solution that meets a broad range of demanding computing needs. The 865G chipset offers solid performance through a variety of exciting features, including dual-channel DDR 400 main memory, an 800 MHz system bus, and an integrated graphics controller with Intel® Extreme Graphics 2 technology.
Processor socket and chipset
No. The Intel 865 chipset doesn't support dual-core processors.
Yes it does. Check out http://www.intel.com/support/graphics/sb/cs-014257.htm
I believe that you are referring to the Intel chipset that is in your computer. This is a collection of electronics that controls input and output of the computer. Lookup the Intel site on the Internet, go to their support section, and check for the chipset that you have. You might be able to download updates, software to speed up your computer, or graphics programs which will allow you to have much better graphics.
The motherboard chipset or memory controller probably doesn't support it.
There is no possible way to play Fallout 3 on the iPad. The processor and graphics card couldn't support it.
There are no external processors. But it's very hard to believe that your processor does not support virtualization. It must be very old. Just to make sure check BIOS settings including chipset and CPU.
This depends on the motherboard / chipset, not the processor. Most Pentium 4s of that speed / era would probably only support DDR RAM.
This is a very old graphics chipset, and no longer supported by Intel, except for downloads of existing drivers. No drivers were ever made for Windows Vista for it. You may be able to install the Windows XP drivers, but since the card is very old and doesn't support any real form of hardware acceleration, there is no advantage to using it over Vista's built-in generic VESA driver.
The 8800 GT is graphics card, offering 112 processor cores and a 256 bit frame buffer. Enabling super fast game play for the gamer. It has the ability to support at the latest games and graphics, with bridging ability to be able to support the next generation of graphics as well.
hi. I own a lenovo b560 and it has an intel p6200 processor. i upgraded it to i5-560m processor and working well. be careful about your chipset. it may not support i series. use a program called "cpu-z" to determine the socket compatibility of two processors.