The answer in brief is no. It will support 4x and 2x only. Please refer to the following: ftp://download.intel.com/support/motherboards/desktop/d850md/productbrief.pdf Hope this helps.
The motherboard slot specifically created by Intel to support video cards is the PCI Express (PCIe) slot. Introduced in 2004, PCIe replaced the older AGP standard and has become the primary interface for connecting graphics cards to motherboards, offering higher bandwidth and improved performance for modern applications. PCIe slots come in various sizes, including x16, which is commonly used for graphics cards.
Any PCI Express card will work.
No
Linux has broad support for a wide range of devices and platforms, so there is no single computer that is "best" suited overall. Generally speaking, any motherboard will "work;" ones with Intel processors and chipsets will probably offer the best performance and stability. Intel graphics cards should work out of the box on any distribution; NVIDIA makes excellent (though proprietary) drivers for their cards. It is probably best to avoid ATI cards and graphics. Virtually all Ethernet adapters work; wireless cards from Intel and Linksys usually have drivers available.
The Intel DG33BU motherboard does not have a dedicated PCI Express slot for a video card. Instead, it features integrated graphics support through its Intel GMA 3100 graphics. However, it does have a PCI Express x16 slot, which can be used for graphics cards, provided that the system's BIOS supports it and there are no hardware limitations.
the Intel is integrated into the motherboard and the radeon is separate is the visual difference....the latest integrated gpu's are still weaker than cards from 2001 from companys like ati or nvidia......
Intel is a company. Technically, it is a 'semiconductor' manufacturing company. Intel makes processors, butr it also makes motherboard chipsets, network cards, flash memory, graphics chips, and various other devices related to computing, electronics and communications.
All pci X16 2.0 cards are backward compatible.
Intel also makes motherboard chipsets, network cards and IC's. flash memory, graphic chips, embedded processors, and other devices related to communications and computing. They make the chipsets for Bluetooth also.
Riser
A motherboard form factor\ determines the size of the board and its features that make it compatible with power supplies cases processors and expansion cards. Beginning with the Intel i800 series of chipsets a hub.
I'm sure it will, it will just run at 4X.