Motherboard
Yes it will but the speed of the processor will not be displayed prperly. The multipliers will probably hve to be tweaked if the motherboard supports it but you can get it to work. I believe you are talking about a AMD processor usually if a processor ids a 200fsb its a duron and is compatible with all AMd motherboards you can probably go into the BIOS and select the right speed which is usually 100 because on amd processors the fsb is doubled to give you the 200 fsb.
Also known as the "FSB", connects the memory and all of the other devices on your motherboard to the CPU (processor). You can think of it like a highway that carries the data around "Motherboard City". The speed of the FSB is expressed as a frequency (it's clock speed) in MHz (MegaHertz). One MHz is one million cycles per second. The FSB also has a "width", expressed in bits, such as 16 or 32 bit etc.. The wider it is, the more data can be transferred in one clock cycle. So, for example, a motherboard featuring "266 FSB" means that it's FSB runs at 266MHz and is usually 32 Bits wide. Although with "true" 64 Bit processors becoming widely available, the bit width can be 64 bits wide.
134Mhz
The Nokia N96 has a Symbian v9.3 operating system, 128MB of RAM, dual LED camera flash, 266MHz processor, and 16GB of internal memory. This particular model of Nokia weighs only .04 ounces.
C. 266MHz
The obvious choice is 266mhz 3.0GHZ.. Still sounds slow for this age but it is faster than the 80 mhz 2.8 GHZ. The more MHZ and GHZ the faster and better the processer is. Hope this Helped! TheKmar10
PC-3200
The typical memory used for the Dell Latitude D600 is 128 MB of RAM and is 266MHz. The maximum amount of memory that the Dell Latitude D600 can have up to is 2GB.
ftp://ftp.download.com/pub/win95/utilities/aawsepersonal.exe Go there, download Sandra, from there you can find out what your motherboard is, what your RAM is and how much you have and most other things you'd like to know about your computer. You may use the benchmark if you know who made your PC and itsmodel number OR if you know what motherboardyou have you can search it on the netalso if you have the manual it will say.otherwise check the bios as it almostalways will say what the CPU speed,bus,ram isif all else fails remember that ifyou have a CPU with a 133mhz+ bus then it is prob DDR AMD advertizesthere bus as twice the real speedbecause it works in a way to doublethe effective speed. so 100mhz is 200mhzand 133mhz is 266mhz and so on.if your system is 100mhz (200mhz)then it 100% takes pc100/pc133unless someone put a older cpuin your newer board. Being lazy, this is the way I'd do it. Go to www.belarc.com, and grab a free copy of Belarc Advisor. This little gem is free for personal use. Run it, and it makes up a COMPLETE inventory of your machine, and all the hardware and software on it. Then, if you go to crucial.com, you can search for ram for your exact model of motherboard. Crucial will show you a list of all types of ram that will work on your particular board, or at least all types that they have available. Simple, easy, takes just a few minutes, and there you go. Slick as a politician at a town meeting.
Yes you can use. PC means DDR1 266mhz ram, PC 2700 means DDR1 333mhz ram. you should not use in combination of both PC2100 and PC2700 because due to Bus frequency mismatch some boards will not support.
DDR2-SDRAM is the RAM technology that utilizes a 4-bit deep prefetch buffer and operates at 1.8V, as compared to it's predecessor DDR which has a 2-bit prefetch buffer and oprates at 2.5V. Like DDR, DDR2 transfers one bit on the rising and falling edges of the clock cycle. DDR2 takes a step further by doubling the frequency of the bus twice the rate of the memory cells. For example, a motherboard with a 133MHz FSB that uses DDR2-SDRAM for system memory, the RAM would operate at 266MHz, and then give you a 533MT data rate with a theoretical throughput of 4266MB/s.
It comes with onboard audio but not video. Below are the Specifications of the ASUS P5AD2-E Premium CPU Supports Intel Pentium 4 5xx Series Socket T Prescott (533/800FSB) Supports Intel Pentium 4 Extreme Edition Socket T Gallatin (800/1066FSB) Supports Intel Celeron D 3xx Series Socket T Prescott (533FSB) Chipset Intel i925XE with HT i925XE Northbridge i82801FB Southbridge DMI @ 2GB/s System Memory 4 DR SDRAM 186pin DIMM Sockets Supports DDR-266/333/400Mhz 64/128Bit Dual Channel Supports up to 4GB Total Memory (4x 1GB) Bus Frequency 133/200/266MHz Internal 533/800/1066MHz External Netburst Micro Architecture Expansion Slots 1 PCI Express x16 2 PCI Express x1 4 PCI Connectivity 3 Parallel ATA port supporting 6 IDE Drives total 8 Serial ATA ports Totals 2 Gigabit Ethernet Ports 1 Wireless G Ethernet Expansion Ports 1 PS2 Keyboard Port 1 PS2 Mouse Port 8 USB 2.0 Ports (4 rear accessible, 4 via expansion bracket) 1 Parallel Port 6 Stereo Audio Ports 2 SPDIF Optical Ports Hope this helps.