Quote: Originally Posted by
Ryze 
Thank you a ton! You helped out quite a bit.
I'm happy to help
Quote: Originally Posted by
Ryze 
I have an adapter for the HDD that I've been using to get my old information off of, and it is called a IDE Sata to USB cable, but it has a 40 pin input? So that is confusing me a little bit. I'm assuming that it is labeled wrong (ebay item) and your correct that I have a PATA HDD.
first off, I wouldn't recommend using that adapter because it forces you to connect your HDD via USB. USB adapters are fine for transferring/backup up data, but it's not a good solution for a permanent HDD (windows XP does not like to boot from USB

)
a 2.5" to 3.5" PATA adapter can be bought for only a few dollars (it's just pin spacing, there are no electronics in the adapter) and will allow you to connect your 2.5" laptop HDD to the motherboard's 3.5" HDD connector/ribbon cable.
I don't think anything is labelled
wrong. I have seen those "IDE / SATA to USB" adapters before. they allow you to hook up either PATA or SATA with the same adapter (one side of the HDD connector is PATA, the other is SATA). I didn't mean to confuse you earlier with the PATA/SATA/IDE comments. basically, IDE is not a connector/interface; it refers to the drive controller being built into the HDD; which applies to both PATA and SATA HDDs, therefore they are both IDE drives; when you see IDE written, the person who wrote it is usually referring to a PATA drive. if you feel so inclined, you can read about it in greater deatil at sites like
this
Quote: Originally Posted by
Ryze 
Now is there a difference in RAM sticks that I must know about, because if not I'll use the ram sticks out of my old dell.
yes there are many differences between RAM sticks. there are different standards, speeds, sizes, pin counts, etc. the Intel "little valley" mini-ITX boards use 240-pin [desktop] DDR2 RAM sticks. (DDR2 laptops use a much smaller 200-pin SODIMM RAM stick). one thing is certain, no memory stick from either of your old laptops is usable in an Intel little valley board.
Quote: Originally Posted by
Ryze 
Then I'm assuming all I would need then is a power supply, MB, sound card, all the cables necessary to hook up the amp and a touch screen.. the WiFi stuff and GPS stuff correct?
you don't
need a sound card to have a functional carPC. almost all motherboards have on-board sound which is sufficient for all non-audiophiles. while a dedicated [quality] sound card will have better sound than on-board sound, it probably will not be noticeable unless you have higher-end audio equipment (higher-end speakers, amps, etc) to take advantage of it. if you're using stock speakers or mid-range aftermarket speakers with a cheap amp than you can save your money and use on-board sound instead.
Quote: Originally Posted by
Ryze 
$600-700 sound feasible with this project?
shop around and it is certainly feasible to keep your project under $700

personally, I buy almost everything off eBay but you can find good deals other places as well. as an example; I bought my current base
system from mo-co-so which included an intel D201GLY2A, M2-ATX, 512MB DDR2 RAM all pre-installed in a nice quality aluminum case for $239. I already had a monitor and HDD so I didn't have to buy anything else for it. you already have 2 HDDs you can use, all you would really need is a monitor to have a functional carPC. so far that would probably cost you about $350-$400 total, which leaves you another $300~$350 for your add-ons/accessories. wifi USB adapters are cheap, GPS can vary depending on what hardware & software you prefer (I use a GlobalSAT BU-353 and iGuidance4 and can recommend both). bottom line is; YES, you can keep your project under $700
Quote: Originally Posted by
Ryze 
it says there is no FM radio for the computer yet, so if I still want to listen to the radio I would need to keep my headunit?
there are FM tuners available for PCs (both PCI and USB) that will work, but I have read that the reception is very poor when compared to a car head unit. I have no experience with any of them to verify this first-hand, since I use a HU with my carPC system anyways (both for AM/FM radio and speaker amplification).
