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Thread: Server Motherboard

  1. #1
    Join Date
    May 2011
    Posts
    1

    smile Server Motherboard

    Hi,

    I have a server mothebord S3420GP with 4 memory slots.
    Intel Xeon 2.4 Ghz Processor,

    if i try to upgrade the Normal 4 GB 1333 MHz Trancend RAM to Kingston DDR 1333 MHz 4 GB X 2 RAM Display not coming.

    Any one can help me on this

    Thanks
    ITRAGS

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Nov 2008
    Posts
    866

    Re: Server Motherboard

    I think it may be the problem of slots just try and use 1 ram at a time on same slots if it works then try it on other slots. There it wont work because it may be not working. try and clean your slot and then try to start it will start. Hope this will help you out.

  3. #3
    Cecil654 Guest

    Re: Server Motherboard

    Server
    A server is a a software program, or the computer on which that program runs, that provides a specific kind of service to client software running on the same computer or other computers on a network.

    The client-server model is an architecture (i.e., a system design) that divides processing between clients and servers that can run on the same machine or on different machines on the same network. It is a major element of modern operating system and network design.

    The client provides the user interface, such as a GUI (graphical user interface), and performs some or all of the processing on requests it makes from the server, which maintains the data and processes the requests.

    An example is a web server, which stores files related to web sites and serves (i.e., sends) them across the Internet to clients (i.e., web browsers) when requested by a user. By far the most popular web server program is Apache, which is claimed to host more than 68 percent of all web sites on the Internet.

    As is the case with other server software, Apache can run on computers which are used for multiple purposes, such as ordinary desktop computers, as well as on dedicated hardware.

    A file server is software, or hardware plus software, that is dedicated to storing files and making them accessible for reading and writing to clients (i.e., users) across a network. A print server is software or hardware that manages one or more printers. A network server manages network traffic. A name server maps user and computer names to machine addresses. A database server allows clients to interact with a database. An application server runs applications for clients.

    A single computer can have multiple server software applications running on it. Also, it is possible for a computer to be both a client and a server simultaneously; this is accomplished by connecting to itself in the same way that a separate computer would.

    Many large enterprises employ numerous dedicated server machines. A collection of servers in one location is commonly referred to as a server farm. If very heavy traffic is expected, load balancing is usually employed to distribute the requests among the various servers so that no single machine is overwhelmed.

    Due to the continual demand for ever more powerful servers in ever decreasing spaces, higher density configurations have been developed. In particular, blade server incorporate a number of sets of server hardware, sometimes as many as nine, each housed inside a high-density module known as a blade, within the space typically occupied by a single computer.

    Confusion often arises with regard to the use of the term server in the context of the X Window System, an extensively used and free client-server system for managing GUIs (but not for creating the GUI itself) on single computers and on networks of computers. The X server resides on each local computer (i.e., those used directly by users) instead of on a remote computer, where it provides access to computer input and output devices (e.g., monitors, keyboards and mice) and performs basic graphics functions. The X clients are the application programs, and they can run on either some other computer on the network and serve many machines containing X servers or they can run on the same machines as the X servers.

    motherboard
    A motherboard is the physical arrangement in a computer that contains the computer's basic circuitry and components. On the typical motherboard, the circuitry is imprinted or affixed to the surface of a firm planar surface and usually manufactured in a single step. The most common motherboard design in desktop computers today is the AT, based on the IBM AT motherboard. A more recent motherboard specification, ATX, improves on the AT design. In both the AT and ATX designs, the computer components included in the motherboard are:


    The microprocessor
    (Optionally) coprocessors
    Memory
    basic input/output system (BIOS)
    Expansion slot
    Interconnecting circuitry

    Additional components can be added to a motherboard through its expansion slot. The electronic interface between the motherboard and the smaller boards or cards in the expansion slots is called the bus.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Mar 2010
    Posts
    186

    Re: Server Motherboard

    If not previously done so, check out the troubleshooting guide / checklist that were made especially for not boot / no screen troubles. Click on the link in my signature. Going through the list, make notes of comments, changes, etc. Even if you do not think the issue on the checklist is important, try anyway (unless the physical limitations of the hardware to avoid). Once you have gone throughout the whole list, but have not gotten a screen, check out breadboarding guide (there is a link to it in the thread of troubleshooting).

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