No.
It is used to add an internal Graphics card on the AGP slot
Yes. Most of the time, if you add a card, via the PCI or AGP slot, it will disable the onboard card.
Dictionary: expansion - noun The act or process of expanding In this case you are expanding the capability of your motherboard. Though you didn't mention what type of expansion slot. ISA, PCI, PCI-E or AGP? These ports allow you to add more graphics cards, extra communication ports, network ports, flash memory boards, extra sata/scsi/ide controllers.
Any add on NIC.. You can fix it in PCI slot of the motherboard..
An ISA slot may be used to add a video card, a network card, or an extra serial port. By the end of the twentieth century, ISA ports were beginning to be replaced by faster PCI and AGP slots. Now, most computers only support PCI and AGP expansion cards.
Probably not as there can be a jumper on the motherboard telling it to use the on board sound or a card in a slot. Just like my very quiet Medion.
NO:actually i am using a asus p5gl-tmx motherboard.it is not having a AGP SLOT OR PCI-E SLOT where u are suppose to place the graphic card.but this mother board rocks
To add a daughter card on the motherboard It may be a TV tuner card, ethernet card, sound card etc
A processor of a computer does not interfere or limit to which kind of graphics card you can add. To find out which kinds of graphics card you can add, you need to open up your computer and find a x16 pci express slot. To find the slot you have to look around your motherboard to find a spot where it says x16 pc-express slot. If you have this slot, you should be able to add a graphics card. P.S. There are other factors to consider when adding a graphics card. For more information read below (related links).
Most computers come with an Integrated Video Chipset, which means yes it's pre-installed. If you buy a new motherboard, it may not come with Integrated graphics, but it will have either a VGA or PCI-E slot to add an external one. Then again, if a motherboard had integrated graphics it also may still have a VGA or PCI-E slot to upgrade.
Most motherboards with onboard graphics have a slot for an upgrade card. The answer for yours will depend on the specific model, but it is very likely that you can.
Yes, but ...-you will need to remove the 128 MB module and replace it with two PC133 SDRAM modules of 256 MB each. The documented maximum RAM capacity is 512 MB-you will need to disable the on-board VGA (if any is present) and put an AGP 2x or AGP 4x video card in the AGP slot; AGP 8x is NOT supported-for a SATAII hard drive, you will first need to add a PCI card with a SATAII controller. So you should have at least 1 free PCI slot.