Hmmm, I highly doubt that. First, you can't put an nVidia graphics card in a 386, there is no AGP or PCI slots available (and a 386 doesn't have enough juice to push it). Second, the X-box has an Intel 733Mhz PIII in them, this will run circles around that 386 and you WILL notice the difference. Third, you can't put a Dolby Digital 5.1 soundcard in a 386, same reason - no PCI slots. Four, where would you hook the four game controllers up to a on a 386? Five, all the 386 motherboards I worked with would not be able to handle an 8GB hard drive. Hell, it wasn't until after the Pentium mobos that they were able to get past the 2GB limit. However, if you meant 386 as in Intel's x86 architecture, then you should have specified x86. Then again, if you were referring to the architecture and assuming you meant to put BSD with some sort of Xbox OS emulator on a modern x86 PC that is as fast as a 733MHz PIII, has a DD5.1 soundcard, an nVidia GeForce III graphics card, a DVD-ROM drive, 4 game controller ports, and an 8+ GB Hard drive. Do you really think you can scrap all that together for under $199? Good luck... ;-P -Jeremy > -----Original Message----- > From: owner-kclug@marauder.illiana.net > [mailto:owner-kclug@marauder.illiana.net]On Behalf Of david nicol > Sent: Friday, May 31, 2002 6:24 PM > To: zscoundrel; kclug@kclug.org > Subject: blowing off microsoft stink > > > zscoundrel offered his shard of wampum: > > > > It is not a really new concept, and it works pretty well when it works, > > but the article sounds like M$'s way of blowing some of the stink off of > > the "XP" logo. . . > > I want to launch an advertising campaign about how *BSD can turn > any old 386 into an X box. > > -- > Mad, adj.: > Affected with a high degree of intellectual independence > -- Ambrose Bierce, "The Devil's Dictionary" > >