Well here is what is says on that website [http://www.srtest.com/referrer/srtest]:
CPU
Minimum: Pentium 4/Athlon XP or better
CPU Speed
Minimum: 2 GHz
System RAM
Minimum: 512 MB
Operating System
Minimum: Windows 2000/XP
Video Card
Minimum: 128 MB AGP GeForce4 Ti4200 or higher video card
Video Card Features - Minimum attributes of your Video Card Video RAM: Required - 128 MB
Video Card 3D Acceleration: Required
Video HW Transform & Lighting: Required
Vertex Shader Ver.: Required - 1.1
Pixel Shader Ver.: Required - 1.3
DirectX Version
Minimum: 9.0c
Sound Card
Minimum: Required
FYI: I fail on all components, except for operating system and sound card. LOL. I definetely need an upgrade.
Compatibility testing website?
Yeah the ram got to be of the same producer etc or the RAM will be messed up I thinkThunderTitan wrote:EDIT: You can fit the RAM, but I belive you have to make sure they're the same "something or other", don't recall right now.
I have 768 Mb DDR/SDR ram, 2-3 years old still going, hehe I think its time to refresh my comps memory a bit
- ThunderTitan
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So if you don't have one the game won't run?Sound Card
Minimum: Required
@Orfinn:
It, not about the producer!
Here, THIS should help.
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- davidtaylorsmith
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Question about Processors...
Was looking at some on a website - was under the impression that the important number was processor speed - i.e. 2GhZ, 2.5, 3.0, whatever. The processors I was looking at also had a BUS SPEED number, and that number didn't seem attached to the GHZ number. For instance, saw a 2.4 GHZ processor with 2000MHZ bus speed, and saw a 3.2 GHZ processor with 800MHZ bus speed. What the heck is bus speed, and is that number more or less important than the processor speed (which I am assuming is the GHZ number)???
Was looking at some on a website - was under the impression that the important number was processor speed - i.e. 2GhZ, 2.5, 3.0, whatever. The processors I was looking at also had a BUS SPEED number, and that number didn't seem attached to the GHZ number. For instance, saw a 2.4 GHZ processor with 2000MHZ bus speed, and saw a 3.2 GHZ processor with 800MHZ bus speed. What the heck is bus speed, and is that number more or less important than the processor speed (which I am assuming is the GHZ number)???
"Last night I stayed up late playing poker with Tarot cards. I got a full house and four people died." -Steven Wright
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Bus speed, at least for Intel Processors, is the speed that CPU access the RAM, and other peripherals. For Intel processors, increase in bus speed nets significant improvement in performance. AMD processors, due to their built in memory controllers, do not benefit significantly with higher bus speed. So to answer your question, the bus speed is not a good measure for speed. It's like determining the top speed of car by RPM.davidtaylorsmith wrote:Question about Processors...
Was looking at some on a website - was under the impression that the important number was processor speed - i.e. 2GhZ, 2.5, 3.0, whatever. The processors I was looking at also had a BUS SPEED number, and that number didn't seem attached to the GHZ number. For instance, saw a 2.4 GHZ processor with 2000MHZ bus speed, and saw a 3.2 GHZ processor with 800MHZ bus speed. What the heck is bus speed, and is that number more or less important than the processor speed (which I am assuming is the GHZ number)???
I really don't understand why the processor requirements are so high. Even recently released FPS with massive polygon counts don't require that much processing power.
As for the OP, don't upgrade your RAM over 2GB. Windows XP Pro (don't know about the home version) can address only upto 3GB. But it needs some hack to get it to use 3GB. By default it can use only upto 2GB and extra memory is wasted.
Only thing I would definitely upgrade is the video card. GeForce 5200FX is the low end card from 2 generations back. Infact, high-end card from 3 generations can blow it away. For "cheap" upgrade around $125USD (PCI-E version), go for GeForce 6600GT (1 generation back). AGP version may cost a little more, and non-"GT" version (e.g. plain 6600) may cost less ( around $90USD).
- davidtaylorsmith
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Thanks for the info.
Sorry I am quite ignorant of what all these graphic cards are. So many types, so many numbers, I have no clue what is from what generation! I would like to buy a new graphics card, and would like to spend around the ballpark you are talking (125 USD), but am not sure if all cards would work on my system. Can I get a PCI Express (or just PCI)? Would an AMD work? Do these different graphics cards and setups prohibit some computers from using them? How would I know what graphics cards are available to me and what are not?
Again sorry for this generic computer question, I am just a bit lost everytime I look in a store or on a website for a graphics card - so many choices and I don't even know where to start or what would run om ny current system. Any advice you can give would be great...
Sorry I am quite ignorant of what all these graphic cards are. So many types, so many numbers, I have no clue what is from what generation! I would like to buy a new graphics card, and would like to spend around the ballpark you are talking (125 USD), but am not sure if all cards would work on my system. Can I get a PCI Express (or just PCI)? Would an AMD work? Do these different graphics cards and setups prohibit some computers from using them? How would I know what graphics cards are available to me and what are not?
Again sorry for this generic computer question, I am just a bit lost everytime I look in a store or on a website for a graphics card - so many choices and I don't even know where to start or what would run om ny current system. Any advice you can give would be great...
"Last night I stayed up late playing poker with Tarot cards. I got a full house and four people died." -Steven Wright
http://s2.bitefight.org/c.php?uid=39177
http://s2.bitefight.org/c.php?uid=39177
Type of graphic cards that you can use depends on the mother board. You can get PCI Express on newer motherboards on both Intel and AMD platforms. If you purchased a system (i.e. Dell, HP, Gateway, etc.) then the users manual should specify what type of expansion slots are available. Usuallly older motherboards (2yrs+) require AGP video cards.davidtaylorsmith wrote:Thanks for the info.
Sorry I am quite ignorant of what all these graphic cards are. So many types, so many numbers, I have no clue what is from what generation! I would like to buy a new graphics card, and would like to spend around the ballpark you are talking (125 USD), but am not sure if all cards would work on my system. Can I get a PCI Express (or just PCI)? Would an AMD work? Do these different graphics cards and setups prohibit some computers from using them? How would I know what graphics cards are available to me and what are not?
Again sorry for this generic computer question, I am just a bit lost everytime I look in a store or on a website for a graphics card - so many choices and I don't even know where to start or what would run om ny current system. Any advice you can give would be great...
Matrox site http://www.matrox.com/mga/workstation/3 ... i_pcie.cfm has a good overview of what the connectors look like if you don't have the manual. The current performance of AGP cards aren't too shabby compared to PCI-E (not to be confused with PCI). Most gaming PCI-E cards are 16x. Try http://www.pricewatch.com/video%5Fcards/.
One word of caution. Make sure you have at least 400 watt power supply before upgrading your video card. Otherwise you may have stability problem due higher power consumption (my card is rated at 165watt!) of new video card, especially PCI-E.
One more thing to consider: current line of motherboard/video cards are expected to be the last generation supporting AGP. So if you plan to upgrade processor or motherboard in next few years, you may be forced to upgrade your video card again. But then again, there's always ebay...
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