Originally posted by: Doomer
I recently came back to AMD. I gave up on them years ago and went with Intel. The reason was the garbage VIA chipsets.
Nforce was the best thing that ever happened to AMD. I say go for it.
btw: My main system ia an ASUS A7N8X Deluxe running an XP 2800 @ 11 x 200 (XP 3200)
I've sold several systems based on the Asus A7N266 VM motherboard and they have been perfect with zero issues.
Another good word for those A7N266-VM's

I tend a fleet at work that has two dozen A7N266-VM's (with more in the pipeline). If you want a non-tweakable board and don't need Firewire, USB 2.0 or support for the upper-end AthlonXPs that use a 333MHz or 400MHz front-side bus, this is a nice board for a nice price, and with no tweakability to speak of, your customers will have a difficult time messing them up.
Personally, I have an A7N8X-Deluxe system at work, and I like it a lot:
specs, an exterior
photo, and Mr. and Mrs. Cheetah in their
living room
To expand more on your question about CPUs, the AthlonXPs are good all-around and gaming processors, and get high marks in business-application tests like Business Winstone 2002. The 800MHz-based Pentium4's are good at practially everything and excel in stuff that involves processing a continuous stream of data, such as video encoding. WinXP users can use the hyperthreading to reduce the impact of running a CPU-intensive application in the background while doing something else in the foreground. The Athlon 64 looks to be a real screamer in gaming situations and improved at some of the areas where the AthlonXP falls behind the latest P4's, too.