If by "type" you mean two different formats, like DDR and DDR2, then no. The memory controller cannot address both types at the same time, especially since they run at different speeds. The motherboard will default to the DDR2 RAM if both are installed.
However, you can use different speeds of the same format, such as 667 MHz and 800 MHz. All modules will default to the lower speed.
Yes. It used PC133 SDRAM modules.
Occasionally on older motherboards, there are slots for SDRAM and DDR RAM but, they CANNOT be used at the same time, due to the different speeds they run at.
Yes ram does not differ from manufacturer to manufacturer.
Depending on what your motherboard can handle, all the RAM (regardless of clockspeed) will clock to the same speed.
The chipset and the motherboard are the primary determination here. In fact there have been motherboards available which can take a couple different kinds of ram (so you can go with whatever is cheap) although not at the same time, but with the same CPU. Pretty much, whatever your motherboard takes, that's what you've gotta use.
Completely different, not interchangeable.
Block and heads are the same. Manifolds are different.Block and heads are the same. Manifolds are different.
ram memory
If the label on one RAM chip says "PC133 SDRAM" and the label on another chip says "SDRAM PC133", they are the same thing. There is no different between them. If you want to put more RAM in your computer you first want to check and make sure you have the extra slots necessary. You usually want to get the same kind of RAM that is already in there. So if the existing RAM is PC133, you want to get more PC133 RAM.
The engine block and heads are the same. The intake and exhaust manifolds are different. The transmissions do not interchange due to different control systems.
yes ram can be mixed
Kingston is a brand of RAM rather than a type, and they manufacture nearly any kind of RAM that a computer made in the past decade would need.