Slot 1 motherboards were primarily designed for the Pentium II and early Pentium III processors. A Pentium Pro could be used with a special converter known as a "slotket." Later Pentium III processors could be retrofitted to work on Slot 1 boards with a similar slotket.
No. Slot 1 cartridges were extremely complex. In addition to likely not fitting correctly in most, the connector would be extremely fragile, holding a large and bulky cartridge by a few fragile pins. No adapter was ever created for this reason. However, there are adapters to use Socket 370 processors on a Slot 1 motherboard. This is possible because Socket 370 processors are much smaller than Slot 1.
A circuit board that plugs into a Slot 1 and has a socket on it is commonly referred to as a "Slot 1 adapter" or "Slot 1 motherboard adapter." This type of adapter allows for the installation of processors or other components that are not natively compatible with the Slot 1 interface, providing flexibility in upgrading or modifying the system. These adapters were particularly used during the era of Intel's Pentium II and III processors.
No motherboard has one slot of RAM
No motherboard has one slot of RAM
if the m'bord has 1 slot it doesn't mean that it is designed only for single processor systems. according to the developing technology single slot can be used for multiprocessor system eg core 2
The Precision 330 is compatible with Intel Pentium II and III processors, specifically those using the Slot 1 interface. It supports various clock speeds and cache sizes, allowing for some flexibility in processor choice. Additionally, it may support certain Celeron processors that also utilize Slot 1. Always check the specific motherboard documentation for compatibility details.
normally the motherboard have 1 slot for video card.
by knowing 1. the socket on your motherboard and 2. the frequency it supports
They are physically compatible, just reversed in alternate directions. They are electronically totally different, however, and a processor designed for Slot 1 cannot be used in Slot A, and vice versa.
There is no such motherboard out on the market today. All of the motherboards out on the market today either have 1 AGP slot, or PCI-Express slots. None of today's motherboards are specially equipped with both types. If you do find a motherboard that has both, you will be paying extremely big bucks for it. I don't think that today's motherboards are able to handle all of the information that an AGP and a PCI-Express slot together. Then, if and when you do find a motherboard that has both of those slots, it probably won't be compatible with the socket type of the Pentium processors. You'll probably have to use one of the higher end AMD processors (i.e. AMD's Athlon 64 FX series).
No, A Pentium 1 is a type of CPU chip. They don't make them anymore. It is a single core and would have to be used on an old motherboard with the proper pin slot.
Slot 1.