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I was wondering if it's possible to hook up my HP pavilion laptop to an HP pavilion pc tower I have lying around.

Do I need some sort of docking thing for this? I really have no idea.

I'm not sure this will even solve my problem. I want to install a game that requires about 1.6GHz and mine is only 500 MHz or so. I don't even know if hooking up the tower would help that situation.. Any help or advice please?

2006-12-24 10:44:00 · 3 answers · asked by kate.astrophe 1 in Computers & Internet Other - Computers

3 answers

You should only hook up computers together in order to share files (called "networking" them). Hooking them up together is not going to help you play faster or steal power from the other. You will need to update your CPU (or get a new machine altogether) in order to do this.

2006-12-24 10:47:06 · answer #1 · answered by J A 2 · 0 0

in case you're hell-bent on salvaging the factors, you may re-use the troublesome tension utilising a 2.5" to 3.5" bracket, yet even funds computer troublesome drives would be speedier. There are some, particularly small type element computer motherboards that use SO-DIMM RAM slots, even regardless of the indisputable fact that it is not suitable for gaming, tremendously pondering small type element motherboards generally have harsh capability regulations, which limits the two CPU and GPU options. There additionally are specific motherboards that use mini PCI-e (that's generally a top rate characteristic), so which you need to re-use the community adapter, yet if you consider that a instantaneous upload-on card would be had for $20, and those motherboards can leap north of $one hundred eighty, it is not an extremely worth a top rate motherboard in case you may in basic terms get a $70 board with a $20 upload on card. So, sufficient beating around the bush - there are no longer any functional capacity of salvaging any of your computer's hardware for a gaming computer. Your in basic terms real ideas are the two figuring out to purchase a sparkling computer for the expressed purpose of gaming (do no longer propose; manufacturers charge absurd rates for mediocre gaming hardware), or development one your self (or have a chum build it for you - propose custom computer).

2016-12-15 07:30:04 · answer #2 · answered by lesniewski 4 · 0 0

If you want to connect them so they would serve the purpose of one computer, than... you can't.

2006-12-24 10:48:23 · answer #3 · answered by Shawn H 6 · 0 0

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