First, it's terrabyte, not terragig and that usually refers to hard drives not memory (ram or random access memory).
Next, dual processors are common now adays.
Third, the processor is the cpu (central processing unit) You mean, can it be installed in a PC (personal computer)
Usually, it takes several hard drives but it is easy to amount a terrabyte of memory storage. The key is the mother board and the chip set that it comes with. You must determine what processors, type of memory sticks (aka ram), and hard drive type and size.
I suggest you purchase a cd on how to build a PC. Great education, well worth the money for the knowledge, usually about $29. Google it up on internet.
2006-12-22 14:57:12
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answer #1
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answered by Mikel 4
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This is only my personal opinion BUT when we all joined the world of home computing, noone told us that there would be
no plateau. It is never-ending/it goes on and on into infinity, and the end result may be more than our human brains can comprehend at this present time.
The industry must continue to grow and make really big bucks or it will implode upon itself. I've heard it said that anything that remains static-will die soon afterward.
So it always has to be NEWER,BIGGER,BETTER,MORE
POWERFUL, ad infinitum.!
A terabyte (as I understand it), would be 1,000 gigabytes
You need a dual hard drive when one is not enough. And we
seem to have reached the time when 2 are not enough
and maybe 3 or 4 are not enough.
We started out with computers who needed the space of
a large barn to operate. Than VOILA , IBM invented the
home computer. A CPU/ a monitor/ a keyboard/a mouse/
and maybe some speakers--and off we went.
But like I said before---MORE is always better--isen't it?
2006-12-22 13:55:33
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Terra gig memory, wow I wish!
I have a Pentium dual processor, with 2 300Gigabyte IDE hard drives, and 2 300Gigabyte serial ATA hard drives.
So I have a dual processor with 1.2 Terabyte hard drive capacity.
You will need a new motherboard, a new processor, and new hard drives.
Memory size is dependent on your motherboard, so if the max is 4 gigabytes, that is all you can install.
2006-12-22 13:41:32
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answer #3
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answered by tattie_herbert 6
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Well : there is an differeances between those two
one called ! Dual Processor which can do multitask were
all programs are loaded into an diskett 's memory bank then
reinstalled with gigabites ect . Yes if the C.P.U will accept it
ok ? prefer http://www.hardware.com !
2006-12-22 13:57:27
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answer #4
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answered by toddk57@sbcglobal.net 6
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decide for it... that is going to artwork yet seem on the ram your at present using. the hyperlink u published is to DDR2 533 my wager is you have the greater regularly occurring (and quicker) DDR2 800 put in. this could reason the two GB of present RAM to down clock to 533MHz besides. that's probably no longer an effective ability of gaining RAM. confident you have greater in spite of the indisputable fact that that is going to all be slowed down. purely ascertain the RAM you purchase fits your present ram in length and velocity (make isn't a huge situation).
2016-12-18 17:57:45
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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no
you need the correct MB that is capable of running those components.
2006-12-22 13:38:31
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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