So, I'm using the Abit IL9 Pro that, at least for now, I'm dealing with and we are mutually-respectful to each other. My ECS and Intel boards were both absolute nightmares, and this was the least bothersome out of the three, so I'm trying to love it, I really am 
The thing is, it does have it quirks, made apparent in both Windows XP and Ubuntu 7.04/7.10. Some are general quirks, lack of good BIOS tweaking, and some are OS-specific, CPU scaling in Ubuntu, random things in XP.
Without going for the super-uber top-of-the-line models, what are some good Boards I should take a look at based on my usage. I need a Socket 775 with at least 4 SATA2 ports, 1 each IDE FDD and IDE DVD drive port, and and a full-speed PCI-E x16 slot. I would prefer in addition to the afore-mentioned 4 DDR2 slots, three 3-pin jacks for system fans (not counting the CPU fan), and support for my Pentium D940.
I *do not* need SLi-capabilities, support for future-installs of DDR3, firewire, or the newest and best chipset. Any of these above are considered bonuses, but I do not require them, nor will I spend extra money 'just to have' them.
My usage is as follows: Triple-boot XP/Kubuntu/Ubuntu (primarily Ubuntu) for e-mailing, internet, music, the occasional DVD, and text-based online-gaming. I do not, nor will I ever, use it for the newest graphical games or resource-intensive activities such as video-editing or anything else. I do not need a quad-core CPU, and plan on keeping my Pentium D 940 for quite some time, but if there is a great Dual Core combo deal (great meaning CPU + Board is only slightly more than just the Board, and it's a Board that falls into the above criteria) on any trusted website, I would at least consider it.
Boards just aren't my strongest point when it comes to computer builds. Thanks so much for your help!
--Jay
The thing is, it does have it quirks, made apparent in both Windows XP and Ubuntu 7.04/7.10. Some are general quirks, lack of good BIOS tweaking, and some are OS-specific, CPU scaling in Ubuntu, random things in XP.
Without going for the super-uber top-of-the-line models, what are some good Boards I should take a look at based on my usage. I need a Socket 775 with at least 4 SATA2 ports, 1 each IDE FDD and IDE DVD drive port, and and a full-speed PCI-E x16 slot. I would prefer in addition to the afore-mentioned 4 DDR2 slots, three 3-pin jacks for system fans (not counting the CPU fan), and support for my Pentium D940.
I *do not* need SLi-capabilities, support for future-installs of DDR3, firewire, or the newest and best chipset. Any of these above are considered bonuses, but I do not require them, nor will I spend extra money 'just to have' them.
My usage is as follows: Triple-boot XP/Kubuntu/Ubuntu (primarily Ubuntu) for e-mailing, internet, music, the occasional DVD, and text-based online-gaming. I do not, nor will I ever, use it for the newest graphical games or resource-intensive activities such as video-editing or anything else. I do not need a quad-core CPU, and plan on keeping my Pentium D 940 for quite some time, but if there is a great Dual Core combo deal (great meaning CPU + Board is only slightly more than just the Board, and it's a Board that falls into the above criteria) on any trusted website, I would at least consider it.
Boards just aren't my strongest point when it comes to computer builds. Thanks so much for your help!
--Jay