32.
32
512 gb of ram
The maximum amount of RAM supported by a computer depends on the processor and the motherboard.
System configuration is determined more by the motherboard, not the processor. A 450 MHz Pentium III was only available in a Slot 1 package, and operated on a 100 MHz FSB. All other specifications of a system (chipset, memory, sound, hard drive, etc...) are dictated by other factors.
The Latitude D610 uses an Intel Pentium M processor, and the highest speed Pentium M Processor that is officially supported by the D610 published specifications is the Pentium M Processor 770 (2.13GHz) I know of reports of the Pentium M Processor 780 (2.26Ghz) being used, but I have not personally verified these. As of my last check with Dell directly, the 770 was the highest processor officially supported. An unsupported processor means no real assistance from Dell if you're having problems.
Intel's first multicore processor was the Xeon, followed the same year (2002) by the Pentium IV. The two cores were implemented in a hyperthreading configuration, allowing two simultaneous threads when both threads were in the same process address space. Independent cores (in different address spaces) were supported starting with the Core-2 Duo. This configuration extended the hyperthreading model to include duplicating enough of the bus interface unit to allow two unrelated threads to run simultaneously.
2 GB of RAM 160 GB HDD
yes but check cpu support list only certain ones a supported
Between 2 and 5 RRU's are supported by one DUG. The actual number varies based on the configuration of the DUG and the intended application for the system.
Some of the server features supported by the HP Proliant ML110 include an easy to use graphical interface, validity checks and Array Configuration Utility.
No, Mac OS X requires a Power PC processor (supported through Leopard) or an Intel Core Duo (or newer) processor since these are the only processors that are used in Apple hardware and Mac OS X may only be installed on a Mac.
1066 MHz, 800 MHz, 533 MHz, and 400 MHz