So it's time get a new machine. I want to build the best 32-bit XP Pro machine that I can. Mobo/CPU/GPU/RAM suggestions please.

Off topic a bit, but the only thing here that's likely to be troublesome is replacing the backlight (unless you mean the entire screen is dead). Main battery might be expensive but shouldn't be a problem, and the rest are easily fixable with a simple teardown and rebuild (fan noise is probably due to stuff clogging it).SuperDeadite wrote:So my lappy is on it's last legs. The LCD is dead, the battery is dead, the CMOS battery is dead, the fan sounds like a jet engine.
Answer is entirely dependant on your definition of "best." Here it sounds like you are considering a desktop PC but you also mentioned a laptop and PCMCIA cards, so it is not entirely clear. (BTW, I have seen PCI cards which provide a Cardbus slot for desktops, although I have not used one.)I want to build the best 32-bit XP Pro machine that I can. Mobo/CPU/GPU/RAM suggestions please.
I missed this before - aside from 16-bit installers, does it have the video mode support and other stuff necessary to run something like Lucasarts' Outlaws?ZellSF wrote:Windows 7 32-bit supports 16-bit programs almost as well as Windows XP does
I don't think (and don't hope) that anyone is suggesting he's using Virtual PC, as like XP, it's not being supported any longer. I am suggesting he look at the alternatives and try them though, if he's going to have a setup that lasts for years for his legacy applications, it really is his best choice.Ed Oscuro wrote:I don't think it's completely clear to SuperDeadite, so I'll say it: Windows Virtual PC is not guaranteed to be compatible, and doesn't have support for DirectX / Direct3D, and it won't provide hardware support for some devices. I don't know if that means PCMCIA, but tuners are not guaranteed to be compatible.
Outlaws supports both Direct3D and Glide. Yes it works in Windows 7, and Windows 7 has support for all the video modes XP has.I missed this before - aside from 16-bit installers, does it have the video mode support and other stuff necessary to run something like Lucasarts' Outlaws?
I could list advantages of Windows 7 over XP forever... But they would all be specific to my usage cases so I don't really bother.Going with Windows 7 would vastly simplify a number of things. At the same time, I'm not sure there are many features of it that would be especially useful in an offline hobbyist computer...the file replace tool maybe, at a stretch.
XP only allows you to change locale. System language is always restricted to the XP version you have. There's nothing preventing you from installing the version of XP you're using now in another VM to make sure you have the correct language version of it.SuperDeadite wrote:Yeah according to Microsoft's help pages, language switching only works in Ultimate/Enterprise.
Anyone know how this affects XP Mode though? If you run Win 7 Pro (no language support), does XP Mode still have language options inside it as real XP Pro would?