Replacing a PCI card involves first powering down the computer and unplugging it from the electrical outlet. Open the computer case by removing the side panel, then locate the PCI card you wish to replace. Carefully unscrew and remove the old card from its slot, insert the new PCI card into the same slot, and secure it with screws. Finally, close the case, reconnect the power, and boot up the computer to install any necessary drivers for the new card.
There is no PCI RAM, but we have a PCI card to which we can connect more that one RAMs to that PCI card
NO. If you have a pci-x slot, probably it is a server, and you want to upgrade your graphics card, you can buy a PCI card and plug it into your PCI-X slot. It should work probably.
No, PCI Cards will not fit on PCI-E slots
A pci and a pci-e are different ports. I would say no for sure. http://www.whatthetech.com/2007/11/10/can-pci-express-graphic-card-work-in-pci-slots/
Are you trying to disable onboard video so you can install a pci video card? If so you have to disable onboard video in your computers bios. Then install your video card in an empty pci slot. Then install the drivers for your pci card in windows.
No.
Yes it will but the video card will run at PCI express 1.0 speed.
A PCIe x16 graphics card will not work in a normal PCI slot. PCIe or PCI Express is a new standard in expansion interfaces. PCIe is physically and electronically incompatible with PCI slots.
You need to be more specific...
No. Because the architectures (design) are not equals and the PCI Express have more speed on Its bus.
It depends on which ports you have. If you have PC then you can connect your video card in ISA (really old port),PCI or PCI-E ports. If you you have a laptop, you can use PCMCI port to connect a video card. You video card should have according specifications for PCI-E it should be PCI-E compatible.
PCI-E 2.0 is reverse compatible that means a motherboard having PCI-E can support a PCI-E Video Card.