Ok, a few things here.
Assailant wrote:
Also, save some money and don't buy DDR2 memory, they are a waste of money at the moment. Go with 1GB of DDR memeory instead.
My understanding is that if the MOBO has DDR2 slots, you can't put DDR sticks in it without causing major problems. One post on the official Dell forums to support this can be found
here. There's also a good comparison of DDR2 to DDR
here. It also shows WHY DDR isn't compatible with a DDR2 MOBO (the notches are different and there is a different number of pins).
bewilde wrote:
I rechecked, 512Mb is the max you can put in that system.
The newer 2400's at least can go to 1g, so he would be ok getting there. You can expect to pay about 100 bucks for another 512 stick of DDR2. There's a problem though. DDR2 needs to work in pairs, like DDR. So you probably have 2 sticks of 256 right now. To get a gig, you'd have to get 2 sticks of 512... see the problem? That's about 200 bucks for an additional 512megs of RAM.
So, for memory, that's something you're kinda screwed on. BUT, back to your original question:
There's not really much available in 256meg for PCI cards. Doing a quick search I found some Radeon 9250's and an NVIDIA FX5200. The cheapest 9250 at Newegg is $58.50 and the NVIDIA is $89.00. Neither one of these cards are blazing fast, but their probably going to be the best you can do with no AGP or PCI-e. As for the Radeon vs. NVIDIA argument... I don't know. I've never had a problem with Radeons. One thing you have to keep in mind is that MOST game makers design their games to work better with one chipset then the other. They can't optimize their game for both without sacrificing something. It just so happens EQ is optimized for NVIDIA cards (you should've seen the mess that happened with the move to a requirement of DX9.0...). Some games are optimized for NVIDIA's, some for Radeons.
Quote:
I would go NVIDIA easier to get drivers and pretty compaptible with most systems.
The Radeon drivers are actually pretty easy. All of their Radeon cards use the same driver suite, so you go to the site, download and install. Simple. A site some of you with video problems (or stability problems in general) might want to check out is http://www.tweakguides.com/ That guy has some awesome articles on getting your system and GFX cards/drivers running smoothly. He also has some tweakguides for specific games.