You need to modify the R4 to M3 (or the other way around) by bridging (r4 to m3) or disconnecting (m3 to r4) the PCB on the top-left of the chip.
Then, you can completely transform the chip so the firmware would work with the hardware.
You can add any software that is compatible with your Mac's operating system and hardware. (Processor and Video card size and make)
hardware
it is hardware
hardware
Nearly every memory card reader on the market is USB compatible, and simply plugs directly into one of your computer's USB ports.
The Nexus 5 comes unlocked, and is compatible with T-Mobile. Simply plug in the micro SIM card and it should be able to run on their network.
No. The hardware in the card only supports DirectX 6 interfaces. You can use it with later versions of DirectX, but games that rely on hardware rendering of newer versions will probably not work.
What you need to be compatible with a new graphics card depends on the card and the computer and operating system.
Part from laptops are not compatible with desktops. Laptop hardware is much smaller in size and will not fit in a desktop.
If you mean an SD card adapter, you put it in a USB slot, then simply plug the SD card into the adapter. If it is some other memory card (for a gaming console) then an adapter is most likely USB compatible.
No they do not. They simply have to work on a compatible frequency. Such as wireless a, b, g etc.
it depends, all mobos should be compatible with ur graphics card but definitely if the grafix card is integrated in to the mobo lol