It would be better to find this information either from your computer's manufacturer (for example Dell or Gateway) or by looking up the Intel AA (altered assembly) number.
This could vary as there are a number of motherboards that have that number. It would be better to find this information either from your computer's manufacturer (for example Dell or Gateway) or by looking up the Intel AA (altered assembly) number.
what are the oldest 4 types of motherboards
no ? i think ..
The microprocessor determines how much RAM your computer can use
Depending on what your motherboard can handle, all the RAM (regardless of clockspeed) will clock to the same speed.
No, not usually. Check with your motherboard specifications to see what RAM is needed and the maximum RAM your motherboard can handle.
The reason for RAM not being intergrated on a motherboard is because theres different RAM sizes and how much RAM a motherboard can handle along with RAM speeds. My motherboard can handle up to 16gb RAM and that is equal to 4 4GB RAM cards and the speeds my motherboard can handle are 2000MHz.
The only thing that affects the decision on RAM is a motherboard. Your motherboard can only support a certain type of RAM.
Yes, as long as the motherboard is not picky about the RAM, it should work fine, but the motherboard will throttle the RAM to PC2100 speed if that is the fastest it supports.
yes, you can use the motherboard with another Processor and add the ram on it and everything else
Easy, you do not allow the motherboard to approach the ram. Keep it safe and hidden in a secure location. You must not let the motherboard get to the ram at all costs.
RAM is located in the motherboard.