Fushigi
Storage Is My Life
If he still has floppies, get a 1GB Flash drive for next-to-nuthin and copy all of his floppies to that on the old PC. I haven't used floppies in literally over a year, probably far longer.
That may well be a possibility down the road should he ever need to install software which requires Vista. I may have to take the plunge myself in a year since it's rumored the new MS Train Simulator coming out then will require Vista.If you ever install Vista, 4GB will make sense. The OS is a hog.
That may well be a possibility down the road should he ever need to install software which requires Vista. I may have to take the plunge myself in a year since it's rumored the new MS Train Simulator coming out then will require Vista.
UPDATE:
All the parts came this week and I put them together. Unfortunately, the power supply was DOA so I had to use the one from my mom's system to set up the machine. XP installed fine, everything works. The only issue is that XP only sees anywhere from 2.75 to 2.93 of the 4GB of RAM. I knew I couldn't use all 4GB but I was hoping for more than this. The exact amount depends upon how much I set the frame buffer for the onboard video to (settings range from 32MB to 256 MB). As for where the RAM is going, in addition to the frame buffer, the onboard video uses 256 MB, and apparently the other devices use 768 MB. I had been hoping to be able to have more of the RAM useable but no such luck. No setting in the BIOS allow me to turn off the address spaces for the unused expansion slots. XP has PAE enabled, but from what I understand on SP2 and later addresses above 4GB are ignored, or I would probably have access to perhaps 3.6 or 3.7GB. Removing one of the 2GB sticks always drops the available RAM by 1GB. At least I'm using half the stick, so it's not a complete waste of money. ;-) In any case, close to 3GB is more than my brother will likely need for a while. If/when he needs more, we'll upgrade to a 64-bit OS and add one or two 4GB sticks in the open slots.
BTW, I'm amazed that the onboard GeForce 7025 has enough power to run MS Train Simulator reasonably well. In fact, it's about as good as the dedicated GeForce 6200 video card in my machine. I guess onboard video isn't really as crappy as it used to be.
Not a chance-the integrated graphics on his old machine wouldn't have been up to it. Also, take those minimum system requirements with a grain of salt. MSTS will run, but barely, and with detail levels turned way down. The program has evolved greatly since it's inception. Add-on routes and trains has become way more complex. The main binary itself has even been altered (i.e. improved greatly) thanks to the MSTSBin project. My previous system (1.4 GHz PIII, Voodoo 3 graphics) had trouble with some high-density routes. The LGVA route was down to 3 or 4 fps in the yards, for example. Even on my present system (Athlon XP 3200, Geforce 6200, 3GB DDR400) I'm lucky to get into the mid-teens there but my brother's machine isn't any better. Frame rates in the mid-teens aren't great, but at least it's playable. Suffice it to say you need a pretty decent system to run MSTS in its present state. I don't know of anyone who has stuck with the MSTS for six years and still only uses the original routes and trains. After a few weeks, that gets old really fast.TS is a very old program that had very limited hardware minimum requirements, should not your brother's old system been able to run MSTS?