Haynie
Member
I need a place with reasonable RAM prices. I need 3 1 gig cards and I have seen prices that range from 39 dollars to over 200 dollars per gig.
Any suggestions.
Any suggestions.
I'd say 'yes'. Win7 isn't exactly a simple OS under the hood, even with some of the fun stuff turned off (like aero glass). For the aount of money you will spend on a new HD, RAM, and Win7, you're pretty much right at the point of a new computer. When a new Dell with 4 Gigs of RAM and a 500GB HD come in at <$300, it seems silly to try and "upgrade" a Compaq running a 12-13 year old Pentium 4.This is an old as dirt Compaq Evo running windows 2000. My plan was to up the RAM, replace the HD with one that was bigger, and install windows 7. The only thing this computer will be doing is running KODU and maybe minecraft.
Am I wasting my time?
Where are you seeing dells for less than 300? I decided to upgrade this one because everything I was finding was over that amount.
I will go hunt some more. Thanks.
I need a place with reasonable RAM prices. I need 3 1 gig cards and I have seen prices that range from 39 dollars to over 200 dollars per gig.
Any suggestions.
Neglecting the fact that Win7 would probably complain about being installed on such a weak system, the generic drivers would be more than adequate for talking to everything on the system.You ABSOLUTELY can't put Win 7 on that system. There are no Win 7 drivers for systems that old. It couldn't even talk to the motherboard
Thanks folks.
This is a great forum. No money spent.
Thanks folks.
This is a great forum. No money spent.
Gee... I'm guessing someone had either some old ram or other old hardware laying around!
Good for you...
And I agree - good for another young person to be interesting in programming.
Think RAM is expensive? I remember when I had to add RAM 1 MEG at a time and pay $40 per MEG (1 MEG stick).
Neglecting the fact that Win7 would probably complain about being installed on such a weak system, the generic drivers would be more than adequate for talking to everything on the system.You ABSOLUTELY can't put Win 7 on that system. There are no Win 7 drivers for systems that old. It couldn't even talk to the motherboard
UMMMM....Good luck with that. I spent almost a week trying to get Win7 up and running on a system that was only 8 years old.
Yea....I tried to get a Vista computer to play with an XP and it wouldn't work Fortunately I had specified XP when I ordered the computer so the took Vista off and put XP on --- had a little problem when I updated the other computer with Windows 7 installed but just a minor one because all we had to do was get the wireless to connect to the internet.Neglecting the fact that Win7 would probably complain about being installed on such a weak system, the generic drivers would be more than adequate for talking to everything on the system.You ABSOLUTELY can't put Win 7 on that system. There are no Win 7 drivers for systems that old. It couldn't even talk to the motherboard
UMMMM....Good luck with that. I spent almost a week trying to get Win7 up and running on a system that was only 8 years old. I finally got it to run, but not well. I had to use a usb wireless card off a router because I could never get the onboard ethernet card to work without Win 7 drivers. Same with the drivers for the onboard card reader. (I've had my own computer consulting business for 35 years, so I'm not exactly a beginner at this.) Admittedly, this was an eMachine, which is now defunct, so no real support available, but even so, I was only able to find about half the necessary drivers. I wound up restoring it back to UGH!!! Vista! (I couldn't find XP drivers for it either.) All in all a wasted, frustrating week.
Sounds a lot like my first system... a 386SX with a 40meg drive. started with 2 Megs of RAM, upgraded to 4 and a '387 coprocessor a few months later so I could run AutoCAD.In 1986 I bought my first "power system". It was a 80386 based CAD system with 3 megabytes of static RAM, an 8 millisecond caching disk controller and two 40 mb ESDI drives.
In February 1981 I took delivery of my first -- IBM PC with 8088 processor, 64k memory, 2 160 KB Floppy discs, 13 inch mono monitor, PSDOS, amd BASICA. We eventually upgraded to 384KB memory and converted a 19 inch TV into a color monitor. We also had a printer....Wound up being a $3500 toy but my 2nd son learned to program on it and that skill got him to an executive position with Red Roof Inns and set the stage for him being the Chief Operating Officer of a 30 motel chain by the time he was 28 -- and he never finished college.Sounds a lot like my first system... a 386SX with a 40meg drive. started with 2 Megs of RAM, upgraded to 4 and a '387 coprocessor a few months later so I could run AutoCAD.In 1986 I bought my first "power system". It was a 80386 based CAD system with 3 megabytes of static RAM, an 8 millisecond caching disk controller and two 40 mb ESDI drives.
Sounds a lot like my first system... a 386SX with a 40meg drive. started with 2 Megs of RAM, upgraded to 4 and a '387 coprocessor a few months later so I could run AutoCAD.In 1986 I bought my first "power system". It was a 80386 based CAD system with 3 megabytes of static RAM, an 8 millisecond caching disk controller and two 40 mb ESDI drives.
My first PC was a TI(Texas Instruments)99-4A, Anyone remember the Bill Cosby ads? Did a little basic programing on it and like it(as a pastime) so well that I upgraded to a TI-Pro. It was an MS-Dos machine running at 5mhz(vs IBM's 4.5) and had near VGA graphics out of the gate. It came with two 160meg floppies, 64megs of memory upgradable to 764