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You will get this message when you install a CPU that is not supported by the mainboard BIOS. Many older mainboards have sockets that will support much more powerful CPUs than they were originally manufactured for. In some cases, the BIOS may be upgradeable to support the new CPU, in others, the CPU may draw too much power or the mainboard chipsets will not support the CPU capabilities. If your CPU is on the list of compatible CPUs...you may need to upgrade the BIOS to support it. You will need to install a CPU that the mainboard will run with to do the BIOS upgrade prior to installing the new CPU, however.
Usually in a laptop you can't just throw any motherboard in. Usually it has to be the same make and model. Sometime the boards can be interchangeable with in model families. However, I wouldn't bet on it.
As I don't know what current Acer Aspire One model type you have, I can not advice upgrade for memory. As far as I know the AoA150, you'd have to open the entire laptop just to reach the memory and upgrade it. The AOA150 has a kind of build in RAM on the mainboard BUT has a additional slot where you can add additional memory.
i was trying to find it for you and came across stuff saying you cant upgrade the ram. it is soldered on to the motherboard. this is what it said
"The memory for Q2010 is soldered on board and is of non-standard form factor. What ZaZ suggested is that there "may" be another empty slot on the mainboard which you may utilize, but there is indeed none. So in short, you can not upgauge your memory. "
a few choices;check ur local library go to their reference section most libraries carry auto ,truck, van repair manuals usually a big green book they let u photo stat what u need cant take out-look for chiltons truck van repair manual for ur year of truck this book covers all trucks-vans over a 5 year period-ask a service shop or tech school if u could borrow or photo stat what u need -but also call around salvage/u-pull-it yards might be cheaper and less problems to get a replacement
Autocad 2010 needs SSE2 to run. The only Semprons which didn't have SSE2 are those for socket A, so I assume you're running a socket A mainboard. I checked and there are no socket A processors that support SSE2 unfortunately.
I think that you could replace your mainboard and the cpu cheaply witha a socket 754 mainboard (which supports SSE2 CPUs and should run with your old ram).
However I advise to upgrade to newer system with AM2 socket or so - they aren't expensive and the increase in performance in power-hungry applications such as AutoCad will be noticeable.
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