Glad I could help, and if you have further questions please don't hesitate to ask. And once you are here for a bit and get some more experience with your computer you will be able to help others out. Not everyone can or wants to build a computer, so I applaud that you went ahead and did so. You gain a lot of knowledge and it is fun to boot. With the computer you have you should be able to play most games at very high settings with silky smooth framerates. Did you need some guidance on installing Windows and such? If so, here are some basic first steps once you have the CPU in place. If it starts up and everything is detected and seems to be running ok, then your good to go as far as installing the OS, but if you experience issues such as no video or beep codes then you will have to begin troubleshooting, and we can help you out there. But let's say that you get it to boot up and everything is good to go then:
1. If you have more than one hard drive, unplug all but the one you are going to use as your boot drive. Trust me you want to do this as Windows sometimes likes to install critical files on a different drive if you have multiple ones available (usually this is not a good idea).
2. Go into the BIOS and set it to its factory defaults just to be on the safe side (you can always tinker around once you have Windows installed) and set the CD ROM to be the first boot device. This will allow the computer to boot from the Windows CD. Save Settings and Exit.
3. Insert the WindowsXP CD and it should ask you to hit any key to boot from it, do so.
a. Sometimes Windows need SATA drivers to install on an SATA hard drive but I have not experienced this and you probably will not either. However, in case you do you will need to get these drivers off the CD that came w/your motherboard and onto a floppy diskette (the mobo manual should explain this and where to find the drivers). Then during the next step (the blue screen) immediately hit F6 (you will see a prompt on the bottom to do so) and in the middle of installing its various drivers it will ask you for the diskette. Insert it and load up the drivers (there may be multiple drivers on the floppy and you will need to load them all).
4. A blue screen (don't worry not the bad kind) will come up while drivers are loading (as seen on the bottom of the screen). Once done the Setup will begin.
5. After a few screens you should get to the point of partitioning and formatting your hard drive(s). I see that you have one Maxtor and it should show up as Unpartitioned Space. Just click on that item to select it and the Setup will automatically create the largest partition available for the drive.
6. Setup will now ask you how you would like to format the partition you just created, I recommend you go with the long format NTFS at least for this first time as it will also check the hard drive for errors (just in case you got a bad drive).
7. Once done let setup finish.
Once Windows is installed you will want to begin installing drivers for the things that Windows did not automatically detect. You can find out what was not found by right-clicking My Computer and selecting the Hardware tab then Device Manager. Anything that shows up w/a yellow exclamation mark needs a driver. These usually will be things like your Audigy card and video card. You actually may want to first install the latest nForce 4 standalone chipset drivers you can find them - >
here before you install any other driver. Then proceed with the Audigy drivers that came with the card or even check their website if there is a newer version, and then the nVidia graphics drivers, the latest version - >
here.
Also do not forget to purchase some sort of antivirus program, I recommend Trend Micro as you get much more than just antivirus (firewall, etc.) - >
here. And keep that box up to date with the latest Microsoft patches by keeping Automatic Updates turned on.
One thing I forgot to ask is what version of WinXP are you installing? Home or Pro? SP1a? SP2? The reason I ask is that since you have a 250GB hard drive WinXP original (no service packs) has a 137GB partition limit. You should be fine if you have an SP1a or SP2 CD. If not you will either have to create a slipstreamed CD with SP2 on it or install with the 137GB limit, apply the service pack after install and use a third party tool such as Partition Magic to increase the size (you may be able to use Disk Management if you have Pro but I am not sure about this). Here is a link to a thread about this very topic in case you need the information ->
click me.
Oh, and BTW I usually can be found playing Half Life 2 Deathmatch so if you happen to come by say hi

. And sorry if you already know all the above. But if you have some questions about it; need more clarity just let me know and I will do my best to help.