A: A mother board contains many cards and the communication of these card is essential. What he is looking for a fast I/O BUSS and after that for potential slot expansion.
Inheritance allows a new class to automatically pick up all the protected and public data and methods of an existing class. To do so, the new class must be derived from the existing class. Private data and methods remain private to the existing class, the base class.
Yes
You must form on top of the existing slab and drill in anchors to join the new concrete to the old this is called a cap
Floors, attics and walls all require insulation of different R-Values which are measured by the thickness of the insulation. The R-Value determines how well the insulation will resist heat flow. The higher the R-Value the more resistance it has to heat and cold. If you are adding to existing insulation there is another factor to consider. You will have to determine the R-Value of the existing to know how much additional insulation to add
Editing It.
The difference between BIOS and UEFI is built into the motherboard chipset; you cannot change an existing motherboard from BIOS to UEFI, all you can do is replace the entire motherboard (and probably the CPU and the RAM as well) with an UEFI based motherboard. (Deleted the previous answer in its entirety because it was compl Save etely incorrect)
- The existing operating system is corrupted. - The existing security software requires upgrading.
You need to look at the motherboard and see if there are any spare memory slots. You also need to check the maximum amount of memory that the motherboard can handle.
I would not call it complicated, but it can be time consuming. You do have to remove the components that connect to the motherboard (including the processor), and reinstall them to the new one. Swapping out the processor is a simple job, but making sure that the new processor is supported by the existing motherboard can be tricky. You have to take into account, not only the motherboard model, but its revision and bios version.
It is important because it has been existing for 400 years :)
The existing Operating system is corrupted
well, if they are all REAL switches and not hubs, there is probably really no need, unless capacity is an issue. If you have hubs, they are bottlenecks and force the computers to wait in line to transmit packets therefore less reliable and slower.
You cannot convert an existing motherboard to DDR2. As The Intel Pentium D was actually designed for motherboards with DDR2 RAM (you must have gone out of your way to purchase one with DDR RAM), it should be no problem to move the processor to another board.
It's not really clear how much a BIOS costs since they're not marketed to end users but are sold to motherboard manufacturers. A BIOS is essentially a part of a motherboard. A BIOS is likely to be removable on a modern motherboard and technically it could be possible to replace a BIOS if it went bad or if for some reason it was to be upgraded, but for BIOS upgrades usually it is sufficient to flash (reprogram) the existing BIOS.
You can see on www.serebii.net
Different traits in a organism
You can join two existing questions where one is just a different wording of the other using Coordinating conjunctions.