That particular model is a desktop; you should be able to find any number of inexpensive motherboards that will fit in the case.
Yes.... you can... but real question is why would you want to?
I would recommend googling the the number on the old motherboard.
the cheapest time would be the winter the cheapest time would be the winter
When you first turn the computer on listen for beeps. The beeps are POST (power on self test) letting you know the status of the hardware during startup. *The easiest and cheapest tool to do this would be a Motherboard Tester. The tester plugs into a PCI slot and runs a diagnostic test on the Motherboard board during POST. They can be found on auction sites like EBay for under $10 (US)
depends on the motherboard, but average would be 4gb.
A abit LG-957 motherboard would be best for a graphic designer.
you would want to change your motherboard basically why i want to..is that you bought a PCI-express card but your motherboard doesnt support that.or you want a faster processor that your old motherboard doesnt support. hope this info helps.
Depending on it's size, it would likely have either an ATX or microATX motherboard.
you would have to consider if there are other hardware upgrades that would have to be done as a result for instance if you have a motherboard with ddr ram but the new motherboard has ddr2 you would have to by new ram same with power supply and even hard drives
The manufacturer didn't include that on the Motherboard CD. If they would included a check utility with a warning then you could get that.
This is not an uncommon problem with these ultrabooks. There are three potential culprits. the only way to determine which is the problem is to test each component. Its either the LCD cable to the screen, the LCD screen itself, or the video graphics on the motherboard, in which case the whole motherboard would need to be replaced. Be warned these laptops have an extremely intricate design and will be a nightmare to dissasemble and reassemble should you decide to do so.
Probably not. Laptop video cards are built in to the motherboard. The entire laptop is usually built around the motherboard and it probably wouldn't be worth the effort to try to replace it. If you're after a specific graphics card you would be better off building a PC from scratch. Many web sites will sell you everything you need and that gives you the flexibility to mix/match whatever you want.