For his birthday I finally bit the bullet and upgraded my son’s desktop. He uses this machine primarily for playing games but occasionally he does some homework on it. He has a tablet PC he uses for homework. The problem with his desktop is that many of the new PC games require a pretty fast CPU and 900 MHz does not cut it. The video card I got him for Christmas helped but it would not reach its potential till it was in a newer motherboard. So here is what I got:
- MSI K8N Neo2 Ultra motherboard
- AMD 3000+ Socket 939
- 512 MB DDR400
- Ultra case and 400 watt power supply
My plan was to reuse the 120 GB disk drive, 128 MB FX5200 video card, and the cD-ROM from his old PC. I ordered everthing except case from Zipzoomfly. I ordered the case/power supply from TigerDirect. I got rebates on the memory and the case/power supply. The ordering process was quick and easy. Everything arrived in two days! I assembled the PC on Friday and took the time to show my son all of my steps. He only wanted a few files backed up. We were good to go!
On Saturday I hooked up everything and powered it on. His computer was not inside the SBS firewall. Normally I have him connected outside the firewall. That’s when I ran into my first two problems. The keyboard hung up during the boot process and would not accept key strokes. The Num Lock, Caps Lock, and Scroll Lock lights were all lit. Unplugging it and plugging it back in fixed that problem. The second problem was a little harder. The CD-ROM would not open and the grinding sound coming from the reader sounded ominous. It had worked recently but was not working now. My son blamed his mom while I scrounged up an old drive.
I found an old drive. It made a grinding sound but it at least opened. I booted Windows 2000 and partitioned and formatted the disk for 80 GB. My plan is to keep 40 GB in reserve. Formatting 80 GB takes a long time. Then disaster struck! We had just finished formatting and was somewhere in the process of installing the operating system when the power went out. We waited but the power did not come back on. We were done for Saturday.
On Sunday morning the power was back on so I restarted the installation. Surprisingly it was not damaged by the power outage. I used the ConnectComputer feature of SBS to apply some of the MS updates and Windows update to apply the rest of the fixes while we went off to church.
While we were out I went to a local Microcenter store and picked up a Samsung combo CD-ROM(CD/RW & DVD-ROM) for $40. I came back and installed the new drive. I also fixed a problem with the operating system not booting from the hard drive. I moved the jumper to Cable Select and hooked up the Master plug to the drive. All of the hardware was working properly now. I finished up the installation by installing Windows media, the latest version of Directx, .NET Framework, the MSI utilities, Wordweb, and PC-cillin. Finally I was done!