Socket A.
Socket A
370
Look for what type of socket the CPU has its usually lga 1155 but there are other kinds so you should look under specs and find the socket type and then find a motherboard that has the socket type
No, A Pentium 1 is a type of CPU chip. They don't make them anymore. It is a single core and would have to be used on an old motherboard with the proper pin slot.
The AMD K6 was a CPU produced by Advanced Micro Devices (AMD). It was designed to fit on a socket 7 motherboard, the same type of motherboard that the original Pentium chip used. It performed better than the Intel Pentium. It was popular around the time of Windows 95 and 98.
Not necessarily. There have been three different sockets used for Pentium 4 processors (Socket 423, Socket 478, and LGA775). They are not interchangeable without special adapters. Even when pin-compatible, motherboard updates may be necessary for the processors to actually work.
Pentium II Processors were slot-based, and did not use a socket like most processors did. Imagine a game boy cartrige-- The Pentium II had a connection band just like a game cartrige does.Socket (Slot) Types used by PII:Slot 1MMC-1MMC-2Mini-Cartridge
An AM2 Socket is a type of socket used by a Processor on a motherboard. These are AMD processors, as indicated by the "AM". When you buy a motherboard and processor you must make sure that they have the same socket and that your motherboard supports the processor you have chosen. For more info: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socket_AM2
Socket 423
An LGA 775 socket motherboard (desktop)
168
ZIF is used on almost all modern processors. You need to find out which socket it uses.
That would go on a socket-7 motherboard. Socket-7 is the same platform as what was used for the original Pentium processor. That was out around the time that Windows 95 and Windows 98 were popular.
No. The Pentium II was only available in a Slot 1 cartridge, with the exception of the Pentium II Overdrive, which was made as an upgrade to Socket 8 motherboards. Pentium II-based Celerons, however, were the first processors available for Socket 370, which was later used for Pentium IIIs.