2000AD wrote:So far the only thing i'm annoyed at is the graphics card, as when i bought Deus Ex: Invisible War the guy in the shop said that if i can run Farcry (which i can) i could run that, but it turns out DE:IW doesn't support MMX.
Umm....MMX is a set of CPU instructions (that was introduced when the first Pentium 2 came out), not a video card.
You mean MX. At any rate, the MX is the "budget" line of nVidia video cards. That card you have is basically a redressed Geforce 2.
Also one of my friend pointed out he could have bought the components and built it much cheaper, and i've no doubt he could, i just prefer trained people to put my PC togerther rather than a friend who drinks vodka instead of water.
Those trained people do it on an assembly line dude.
Quite a few times they do make mistakes. Furthermore, a do-it-yourself job will definitely have better airflow. You would be suprised how big a mess you'll find if you tear apart a pre-built box. Dell is famous for horrible airflow problems. To them, one fan is all you need, and its for out-take only. HP likes to cram things as close as possible without regard for airflow or the need for room to move your hands about when servicing it. Compaq is in the same boat with Dell....only you're lucky if they give you a fan. The only pre-built system I've seen with any forethought put into it is by IBM. The last machine I worked on was obviously worked on by an actual engineer because the wiring was tucked away nicely, no ribbon cable obstructed any source of airflow, and when it came to servicing it was like working on a system I built myself. Everything was easy to get to, and I never had to fumble around with my hands just to hold something up or remove it.
Now, here's a parts list I've drawn up for you that would easily work as a college rig and a killer gaming rig at the same time.
Case:
Foxconn TH202 CaseEdge (Blue & Black) - $59 (comes in Red&Black, Blue&Black, and Green&Black)
Motherboard:
Asus A7N8X-E - $87
CPU:
AMD Athlon XP 3000+ (400MHz FSB, Barton core) OEM - $135
Heatsink:
Thermaltake Volcano 12 - $31.99
RAM:
2x 256MB PC3200 Corsair Value Select DDR - $88
Hard Drive:
Maxtor 160GB HDD, ATA133 IDE - $88.50
Video:
Leadtek GF 6600GT 128MB GDDR3 - $195
CD/DVD:
Lite-On 16X Double Layer DVD-RW - $78
Operating System:
Windows XP w/SP2 Upgrade Academic - $82 (normally twice this price w/o academic discount)
That brings up the total to a whopping $649.29 USD. Add about $170 or so for a decent 19" CRT monitor and you have a complete system for well under your budget.
Now I highly recommend you get some kind of protection for your computer. Whether or not your college has decent wiring isn't an issue, but it only takes one time to turn your nice computer into an expensive doorstop. I highly recommend the
APC 725VA BACK-UPS ES - $77.99