Have you made sure you're supplying adequate power to the mobo? Are you getting an error codes (beeps)? Any lights flashing? Does just the board and RAM work?
What type of RAID (software/hardware)? Also, it's probably not a good idea to install your OS on the RAID. Why not just use the drives seperately? That way if one fails you have the other and you don't loose everything, and you can use all the space on your drives. Remember with RAID0 you...
FlyingPenguin is right. I'd like to add that if you haven't changed the default channel your wireless router uses (which is most likely 6) then you're probably getting interference from other wireless routers and cards around you.
Have you installed the nforce4 drivers? Because you're NIC is provided by the nforce4 chipset, you need to install these drivers before you can use your NIC.
What you're wanting to do is called "teaming". Not many cards support this feature and it's only available in the Windows Server OS's AFAIK. A very small amount of programs allow you to bind to a specific interface. But besides "teaming" there is no other way to do what you want in Windows.
Antec PSU's...SmartPower 2 500watt, modular, $52 shipped
That looks like the best deal to me. I've been using Antec cases/PSU's for the last 6 years and never had problems. In fact, I'm getting a new Sonata II next week.
If you want to format the drive, think about downloading a partition manager used for installing Linux which can format NTFS. This message is most likely from the files left on the drive you're trying to install on. I second amdskip on the sucks part.
If you can get a bootable windows 2000 CD, this utility will extract the CD key for you.
http://www.magicaljellybean.com/keyfinder.shtml
Another thought if you can't get it to boot. Run jelly bean on a machine with Windows 2000 installed and use Filemon to see which file contains the CD...
If it returns to normal after 30-40secs, it most likely the game freeing the memory it was using, and this may take awhile b/c the game allocates a larger single pool of memory from the system when it starts. Then, as memory is needed in the game, the internal MMU of the game allocates memory...
Assume the RAID size is 1 disk. If I create a RAID0 array on this one disk using controller A, and if I were to buy a new motherboard w/ controller B, would I need to rebuild the raid (lose all data) using the new controller B or should the new controller B be able to continue using the disk?
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