I wanted to let you know what I am lined up to buy as far as my new system. Where relevant, I have noted why I choose that particular component, partially because in some pathetic way it seems to justify all the forlorn hours I spent trying to figure all of this out.
Monitor: ViewSonic E90fb 19" it's black, it's gorgeous, and it's huge. It has also gotten good reviews and the price is very reasonable. I looked at the ViewSonic GS790, the NEC Multisync FE950Plus, NEC Multisync FP955, SyncMaster 900NF, and the ViewSonic P95f. Price, performance, and color were big factors for me at the beginning. However, once I got it down to two final choices, I wasn't willing to pay extra cash for a white monitor. You can see how rational I was about all this…
Case: Directron SF-860B case -- I really considered a Lian Li aluminum case, but I found I wasn't all that partial to the aluminum look. Also the price was astronomical for a case that was just going to sit under my desk in the dark. The SF-860 is a sweet looking black case with a hydraulic front dust cover like the Alienware computers. Besides being totally fun, it also means that the front panels of my drives didn't have to be black, since they will be covered by the dust cover.
Power Supply: Enermax 350W Whisper PS -- top quality. I shelled out the cash without a second thought.
Motherboard: Asus A7V333 motherboard -- this was by the far the hardest decision I had to make. I liked the ABIT KR7A but decided against it because of the lack of legacy ports, the reported stability problems with both memory and SYSmark, and the fact that there were only 3 PCI slots. I understand that it is also temperamental about the way you place the sound card. I really liked the Gigabyte GA-7VRXP KT333. However, the people building the computer for me did not have much experience with this board and it does not have any thermal protection features besides an alarm, which I felt was an important flaw in an AMD rig.
CPU: AMD Athlon XP 2000+ -- definitely wanted to go with AMD, but didn't need the fastest CPU out there. Ok, ok… I didn't have the money for the fastest thing out there.
RAM: Corsair CMX512-3000C2 PC3000 -- Why did I choose this? Um…. how about because I could.
Hard Drive 1: Western Digital Caviar SE 100 GB w/ 8MB cache -- I have wanted a huge, fast hard drive for a long time. So I went for it. Next, a red Corvette….
Hard Drive 2: Western Digital Caviar 20 GB -- storage and to place a second operating system, since XP doesn't play nice with my aging peripherals. I could have simply portioned the other drive, but I had a horrible disaster once with that scenario and decided to play it safe.
Video Card: Xtasy GeForce4 TI4200 AGP 128MB DDR -- second hardest decision. I wanted dual monitor support and I am a big Nvidia fan, so I went with the GeForce4. But I didn't want to put out the cash for a Ti4600. The 4200s have gotten great reviews, are reasonably priced, and perform admirably compared to the Ti4600s and 4400s.
Sound Card: Sound Blaster Live! Audigy -- I did have a budget and since I mostly use my headphones (my computer room isn't set up well for sound and my speakers are only average) when gaming, I just went with a basic sound card.
DVD Rom: Artec 16x DVD-ROM -- I didn't see much difference in the DVD ROMs, so I went with what the tech suggested. I didn't do a DVD writer due to cost consideration and all the competing standards.
CD-RW: TDK VeloCD 40x/12x/48x EIDE -- another hard choice. I looked at the Plextor 40/12/40A, TDK VeloCD 32/10/40, CenDyne Lightning II 32X/12X/40X EIDE, Yamaha CRW3200EZ 24X/10X/40X EIDE. Outside of price considerations, I didn't care for the Roxio Easy CD Creator software included with the Plextor writer and its performance was slower than some of the above models. It is also finicky about the media it uses. The TDK had very good performance, the Nero Burning ROM 5.5 software, good compatibility with various media, good tech support, and a reasonable price. And the blue drive panel is cool.
Network card: 3COM 10/100 Fast Etherlink XL -- again, tech suggested this. Whatever….
Teac 3.5inch 1.44 Floppy Drive
Modem: Intel 536EP Voice/Fax Modem
Mouse: Microsoft Intellimouse Optical
OS: Windows XP Home
Thank you to everyone who posted here and PMed me -- it really helped me create a great gaming rig. After having been through this ( two weeks ago I couldn't have told you what a power supply was), I have even more respect for people such as yourselves who actually understand all of this.