need help with motherboards
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Re: need help with motherboards
Posted by diablo on Tue Jan 13th at 11:40am 2004


Ok i'm looking for a motherboard that supports;
DDR RAM
1.7 p4 Ghz cpu
8x AGP slot

I have no idea whats what so can someone please assist me with this and i would be very grateful.





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Re: need help with motherboards
Posted by Leperous on Tue Jan 13th at 12:40pm 2004


Socket 423 or 478? I think you can get both types for this processor...





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Re: need help with motherboards
Posted by Kage_Prototype on Tue Jan 13th at 12:43pm 2004


I think Pentium stopped distributing socket 423 processors a while back. [addsig]



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Re: need help with motherboards
Posted by diablo on Tue Jan 13th at 12:50pm 2004


How do I find out its socket?





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Re: need help with motherboards
Posted by Wild Card on Tue Jan 13th at 5:39pm 2004


Go on www.directron.com and browse their motherboards available and stuff like that. Also, go to local computer hardware stores and find out what they can sell then find out if the board if for you.

Things to look out for are:

If it will support your processor
what type of RAM it supports and at what speed
integrated LAN or sound (keep in mind that integrated sound inst a bad thing, I actually like it alot)
Does it support your hard drive (should be a problem an less you have a SATA Hard drive)

[addsig]




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Re: need help with motherboards
Posted by Leperous on Tue Jan 13th at 10:37pm 2004


? posted by Kage_Prototype
I think Pentium stopped distributing socket 423 processors a while back.

Yes they did, but my psychic powers tell me he may already have a processor that may or not be that old

Anyways I guess you can find out either from still having the original boxes/manual for it or knowing what motherboard you currently have and looking it up, or even checking the processor directly and looking on the Intel website... I don't think your bus speed/cache can help determine it :/





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Re: need help with motherboards
Posted by diablo on Wed Jan 14th at 2:52am 2004


? posted by Leperous
? posted by Kage_Prototype
I think Pentium stopped distributing socket 423 processors a while back.

Yes they did, but my psychic powers tell me he may already have a processor that may or not be that old

Anyways I guess you can find out either from still having the original boxes/manual for it or knowing what motherboard you currently have and looking it up, or even checking the processor directly and looking on the Intel website... I don't think your bus speed/cache can help determine it :/

Thanks lep, you must have powerful psychic powers I tell you because you are right!

845 chipset
478 socket

Do they still sell motherboards that support that?

Edit: I found a motherboard that supports a 478 socket but what does the chipset mean?





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Re: need help with motherboards
Posted by Crono on Wed Jan 14th at 4:13am 2004


A chipset is on the motherboard, basically it tells everything where to go.

The processor sends and recieves data through the bus to memory, the processor thinks everything is memory. In between the memory and the processor is the chipset, it used to be the iosubsystem and was the size of a brick.

The processor sends the chipset an address in memory and when it's writting it sends data as well, the chipset checks that address in memory, if it's valid it does it's stuff, if it is invalid, it checks to see if that block is being used by something else such as your video card or your harddrive and it sends the data accordingly.

By the way, your chipset is more important then your processor its really the 'brains' the processor is pretty much a slave which thinks it's king. In fact, it doesn't even know anything else exsists in the entire computer except memory.

Just some hardware facts. Hope it helps. [addsig]




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Re: need help with motherboards
Posted by diablo on Wed Jan 14th at 6:10am 2004


? posted by Crono
A chipset is on the motherboard, basically it tells everything where to go.

The processor sends and recieves data through the bus to memory, the processor thinks everything is memory. In between the memory and the processor is the chipset, it used to be the iosubsystem and was the size of a brick.

The processor sends the chipset an address in memory and when it's writting it sends data as well, the chipset checks that address in memory, if it's valid it does it's stuff, if it is invalid, it checks to see if that block is being used by something else such as your video card or your harddrive and it sends the data accordingly.

By the way, your chipset is more important then your processor its really the 'brains' the processor is pretty much a slave which thinks it's king. In fact, it doesn't even know anything else exsists in the entire computer except memory.

Just some hardware facts. Hope it helps.

Thank you! Very helpful indeed.






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