Sockets
You cant just take any processor and plug it into any board -- it has to fit -- and there are different interconnects (which are incompatible with each other however for some there are adapters). In common converse, "socket" may be reduced to "S" or "SKT". There are an ungodly number of exceptions to this rule (especially with Intel processors -- anyone who's dug around with OPNs will know)
* Socket 423 = This was the initial socket interface used by Intel's Pentium4s when they debuted. Discontinued.
* SocketA/Socket462 = This is a 462 pin connection used by AthlonXP/Duron/Sempron series processors. This has recently been discontinued
* Socket478 = A 478 pin connection used by a good number of Intel's Pentium4/Celeron lineup and has only been recently phased out
* Socket479 = This is a 479 pin interface used by Pentium M and Celeron M (both are mobile) processors
* Socket603/Socket604 = This is a 602 pin, Intel Xeon interface
* Socket754 = A 754 pin interface used by some of AMD's Athlon64 and Sempron lineup. Anything using this configuration will not support dual channel memory.
* Socket775/SocketT/LGA775 = A new interface used by modern Intel Pentium4/PentiumD/CeleronD processors, this is a slightly backwards interface which has the pins on the board and the sockets on the chip instead of the reverse as we've all come to love
* Socket939 = This is the mainstream AMD Athlon64 interface and anything using this will support dual channel memory access
* Socket940 = Originally used as a AMD Athlon64 interface as well as the AMD Opteron setup, this configuration has since been relegated to Opteron processors only and does support dual channel memory This configuration requires fancy registered memory
You've just casually stumbled into a world of mismatching standards, brands, speeds, models, sizes, and compatibility issues.
The short answer is no.
If you give us your motherboard model number (usually printed on the MoBo itself) we can advise as to whether you can upgrade or whether you should start fresh. :good:
I'm guessing you're using a laptop, probably a ASUS U20A series? Generally laptop's are bound to whatever CPU they come with, though there are a few exceptions. So with the exception of heavy duty modding (pointlessly costly, time consuming and chance of total incompatibility) that laptop is bound to that processor.
therefore, i dont see why i cant put in a 1.4ghz dual processor myself.
No CPU's are motherboard specific so you can only use the one's that are meant for your motherboard
well my dad had the same computer as me (spec for spec)
B/c you have to get to the CPU in order to replace it. Laptops are packed pretty tight - and not easy to get to parts beyond the HDD, Battery, and RAM. Theoretically could you upgrade it - perhaps - but you still need to reach your socket in order to do it - and that might be more challenging than you anticipate.
With Desktops - it's a piece of cake - laptop is a different beast.
i cant find any info on wheather you can upgrade or not it would be risky and there is no guarentee of success and it would void any kind of warranty you have meaning if it did go wrong you would be stuck with a dead laptop and no way to replace it
have you ever replaced a processor before? also how do you know its going to void the warranty? I just really don't think it's going to void the warranty.