First post, by ubiq
I completely skipped the Vista era of PC computing. I spent that entire early Core 2 Duo era using OSX for my primary computing, and an Xbox 360 for gaming - still a correct choice in hindsight, imo. So, for PCs I held on to a AthlonXP + Radeon AIW 9700 Pro Shuttle mini pc all the way until 2010 when I built a i5-750 + Radeon 5850 Windows 7 system.
I recently decided I may as well grab some mid-late 00’s hardware while it’s still dirt cheap and locally available. Found this beige beauty and it spoke to me:
Inside I found:
Mobo: ASUS P5K SE
CPU: Core 2 Duo E6850
Memory: 2GB DDR2-667
GPU: GeForce 7600 GS
Sound: On-board AC97
Storage: A couple very loud Maxtor IDE drives, a SATA DVD-Rom Writer, and an actual 3.5 floppy drive
PSU: 420W “Codegen”, which I was warned to ditch immediately when I posted in the buying thread
Misc: A super knackered 80mm rear case fan (incredibly loud, assuming bearings shot)
The case had clearly housed a P4 system that had been upgraded.
The classic no-frills gold ASUS motherboard really feels like a transitionary end-of-an-era artifact. Before so many mobos got all... blue, or whatever. Was surprised to learn that the oddly-located single IDE port was due to the Bearlake chipset dropping PATA support, so mobo makers had to go third-party (Marvell in this one's case). And it still has floppy support!
Anyway, I gave it a bit of a glow-up, which turned into replacing pretty much everything except the mobo and the DVD-Rom drive: 😅
So now:
Mobo: ASUS P5K SE
CPU: Core 2 Quad Q9500
Memory: 4GB DDR2-800 (Corsair XMS2)
GPU: EVGA GeForce 9800 GTX+
Sound: Sound Blaster X-Fi (SB0460)
Storage: 1TB SATA
SATA DVD-Rom Writer
3.5 floppy
PSU: Corsair 450W Semi-modular
Misc: Replaced the rear fan with a 120mm, added a second 120mm to the side panel, and 2x80mm fans to the front
Everything except the 9800 GTX+ I already had lying around. Considered an SSD, but it wouldn't have had one at the time, and I don't think I miss it.
The Q9500 I didn't even think of at first as I assumed the board/chipset was too old to support it. But with a BIOS update, I popped it in there and it worked no worries. I googled what the stock HSF for a Q9500 was and it looks to be pretty much the same as the one this E6850 came with. Specs-wise looks like the CPUs are 65W vs 95W. Seems fine for now, and I also vastly upgraded the case's airflow. 🤷♂️
Getting Vista installed was actually a huge hassle. I simply could not get it to boot the installer of any sort of USB I tried. The pre-EFI bios this mobo has is pretty basic, and I just couldn’t figure out what it would accept as a USB boot device. After wasting a bunch of time I eventually resorted to burning the ISO to a DVD and going from there.
Getting the Sound Blaster X-Fi installed was another exercise in frustration. I figured it would be a good addition because the last EAX-supporting games came out around this era. But after struggling to get any sort of drivers at all installed, I couldn’t seem to get any sort of EAX support working. Of course, I eventually did enough internet research to learn that DX10 + Vista pretty much killed EAX and any support was only available through some wrapper. UHG. Seems I missed out on the joy of experiencing the total obsolescence discrete sound cards.
Otherwise, using Vista has been a pretty miserable experience. With UAC and all that, Vista is constantly throwing up warnings and roadblocks about anything and everything. So many things that used to be simple have been made more complicated (but with a fresh coat of paint). The UI has not aged gracefully and really does a great job at putting me in the time and place where people were hating Vista's whole deal. And yeah, 3DMark scores are well down from ones I did in XP - even though I didn't upgrade the Ram + CPU until moving to Vista! (Same GPU)
So, I would say as a budget, near-retro project this was a complete success. For about $120 total, I played around with hardware and software that I missed the first time around. And yeah, I kinda HATED it and feel pretty justified in taking a pass the first time around.
Really, the only reason I decided to check out Vista was for the DX10 support for the 9800 GTX+. At this point (after an entire week), I think I’m ready to move on. Question is - back to XP, or ahead to 7?