I apologize for the ultra l337 post title. I’m a giant nerd.
Here’s the deal with my wife’s old computer: it’s actually a Shuttle I built three years ago when I lived in Iowa. I wanted it to play Vampire Bloodlines: Masquerade and it was basically underpowered as soon as I built it. The smallish power supply and MicroATX motherboard that the case mandated were not good choices.
Unfortunately it recently picked up a habit in which it refused to shut down and claimed that every running program needed to be forcefully terminated. I’m no computer engineer (or am I? yes. yes I am.) but I’m pretty sure this is bad and we decided to upgrade.
We ventured out to Micro Center to get parts to build a new machine because I like being subjected to the odor of humanity in tiny, dirty spaces and I’m really wild about semi-competent sales help. Thankfully we found a guy who actually knew what he was talking about and ended up with…. this!
TECH SPECS!
- AMD Phenom II X3 720 (2.8GHz)
- ASUS mobo
- 1GB NVidia GeForce GT 220 (nothing radical, but enough to let me play Diablo III)
- 4GB DDR2 RAMZ
- 500GB hard drive (unfortunately no solid state drives and not into the Terrabytes)
- 2 state of the art blue LED lit case fans
Oddity #1: there are actually a total of four DIMMs for RAM expansion, but as I recently learned, 32-bit Windows7 will only recognize 3.5 GB, and of that 3.5 GB only 3.25 will be available for application use. If we ever upgrade to Windows7 64 we’ll do another upgrade here. The sales guy was confident that I could run two 2GB chips and 21GB chips with no problem as long as I seated them in the correct DIMM.
Oddity #2: the motherboard had HDMI and DVI outputs and – I learned this after purchasing – it has an integrated ATI graphics chipset. Thankfully the integrated chipset is less powerful than the NVIDIA I bought, so I feel ok about this.
Welcome to the family, new computer. I hope the cats don’t knock you over.

Admin comment by Daniel Sisco · March 31, 2010 at 9:58 pm
@Jason – I BOUGHT THE AMD CHIP FOR YOU I JUST WANT YOU TO KNOW.
Jason · April 1, 2010 at 4:47 pm
Hahaha thanks! What is the ATI chipset that’s on there? If it’s a certain type (780G) you could do a hybrid crossfire with a discrete ATI graphics card (of course…that’s if you take that NVidia crud back)
http://game.amd.com/us-en/crossfirex_hybrid.aspx
AMD on AMD on AMD
DO IT!!!
Admin comment by Daniel Sisco · April 1, 2010 at 7:13 pm
the board has an integrated ATI HD4200, which isn’t listed on the link you shared, but the Asus page says that the board is CrossFireX enabled.
http://usa.asus.com/product.aspx?P_ID=ef0qgvMIwOUagAVl
I am now tempted to take the NVidia back and get something a little bit beefier. Hmmm…. what is a good mid-range ATI card?
Jason · April 2, 2010 at 9:45 am
Yea, your chipset is a better one than I listed. I would get something in the 5000 series if I were to buy one now:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductList.aspx?Submit=ENE&N=2010380048%201305520549%20106793261&name=Radeon%20HD%205000%20series
Not sure what your price-point is, but there are quite a few options in there.