PC Gods Angry! PC Gods SMASH!
For the last few weeks, I've been contemplating a PC upgrade - there's been a recent RAM and CPU price drop, and there are a ton of games coming out that I'm dying to play, but that my current PC really isn't up to.
However, I couldn't really justify dropping that much cash, so I decided to buy an Xbox 360 instead. I picked it up on Friday, and had a blast the whole weekend smashing zombies in Dead Rising and playing various demos.
But, of course, I knew my defection would not go unnoticed by the supernatural powers that control the PC Gaming world. So I was not surprised when my wife's PC died on Sunday morning - I could tell by the crusty brown ooze that had leaked out of several capacitors that she was yet another victim of The Bad Cap Scandal.
So at that point, I had a choice - rebuild her PC for a couple of hundred bucks, or give her my PC and build myself a new one. I'm weak, so I decided to build a new PC!
She needed her PC by Tuesday morning, which pretty much eliminated any chance of shopping online, so I headed down to Fry's in Renton, wandered down the aisles filled with Fabulous Products (peppered with loss leaders which were invariably out of stock), weathered the gauntlet of belligerent East African salesmen who didn't actually know anything about the products they were trying to sell me, but were quite willing to say anything I wanted to hear to close the sale, and came home with a pile of merchandise that was invariably priced 20-30% over what I would have paid had I just ordered from NewEgg. Plus a shiny new copy of Vista Home Premium, Upgrade Edition (queue forboding music)
Now, for the fun part - building the PC! So, the first, easy step is to move my PC from my giant case to a smaller case that fits under the Darling Wife's desk. No problem! Um, except it no longer boots. So I reseated all the components, and...it crashes booting into Windows! Several hours later, after swapping components around, etc, I finally figure out that it's some kind of ESCD problem (whatever that is) and putting the components back exactly how they were lets me boot to desktop.
Whew.
Now to do a fresh install of Windows XP on the PC...except Windows XP doesn't support hard drives > 128Gb without SP2, which isn't part of my install disk. So I create a new install disk that includes SP2, and we're off to the races. One down, one to go.
I nervously unpacked all my components from Fry's, including the budget motherboard I picked up because It Was Just So Damned Cheap! put them all in my new PC, plugged everything in, turned on the PC and....everything works. It just boots right up, and starts chugging through the Vista install. Maybe the most painless PC build I've ever done, until...Vista asks me for my product key. No problem, I enter it, figuring it might ask me to insert my Win2K CD (since it's an upgrade CD) or maybe enter my Win2K product key.
Nope. It wants me to run the CD from within my Win2K installation, basically making the "upgrade" CD worthless if you are simultaneously upgrading the hardware (especially since it's incredibly unlikely that Win2K would support my new SATA drive, etc).
Once again, Google and Paul Thurrott came to my rescue - the trick is to install Vista without a product key (which puts it in a 30 day trial mode), then "upgrade" that Vista installation using my install DVD. Voila!
This may be the last home-build I do, though - life is just too damned short to spend hours building PCs anymore.
P.S. Oooh, almost forgot - I mostly play my 360 using headphones, and I got this fun little gadget to help me. It's a tiny, battery-powered amp from penguinamp.com, and it sounds great:



