
WATYF
...happier than you.
Oh yeah... a newbie to indoctrinate....
(muuahahahahahaaaa!!!!)
I am a computer geek.. so I'll be able to give you some advice on that... And since I use my setup to record songs for the Youth Group worship band I play in... I can assure you all these parts are demon-free. (and dolphin-free for that matter).
I can't give you as much advice as I'd like to for the mics/mixers/and what not... but on computers,.. I can help. And just so you know... you have a pretty nice budget... (for around here). If I had 7 Large to throw around I'd be doin' purdy nice.
First off... P4 or AMD... well... the simple answer to that is...
AMD... duh.
O.K... So it's not so simple of an answer... but... the more you save on the cost of the 'puter.. the more you get to spend on the gear, which (major point here!!!) is much more important that which processor you choose. The best P4 right now can take an AMD in some apps... but the cost is more than twice as much (if not more.. compare $470 to $200) and the performance increase isn't enough to justify it. Also note that certain software is sometimes optimized for a particular CPU... so keep that in mind. Having said that.... I'd go with this. (you did ask for specifics)
CPU: Athlon XP 2000+ or 2100+ (dirt cheap right now)
Mobo: Get either a VIA KT266a chipset board or an AMD 761 board. Either way you're good. The VIA's have had some issues in the past... most of which are resolved... but if you want to play it ultra-safe, get an AMD based board. In which case you'd want to go with an Asus or Gigabyte board with the AMD 761 chipset. If you want to try the KT266a (which I actually recommend) then go with a Soyo Dragon plus (or ultra if you feel like going DDR333) or Asus K7V266-E. The Soyo is a super-stable board and outperforms a good deal of the other KT266a boards... which, keep in mind, all outperform the AMD based boards.
HDD: Maxtor Diamond Max Plus series (D740X).
O/S: I would definitely go with Windows XP Pro. I'm no big Micro$oft fan... and I know Windows has its short-comings.. (most of which I loathe) but XP is by far the best Windows O/S yet. I am more than pleased with it. (and I've used every one of 'em since 3.1) I have yet to have any kind of instability problems or annoying hassles with installation of drivers or what not. (Of course, my mobo helps with the stability)
Just for an example.. I built this set-up for less than a grand.
AMD Athlon XP1900+
(Volcano 6cu HS/F)
Soyo Dragon Plus Mobo
512MB Kingston PC2100
128MB GeForce4 Ti4200 (soon)
Maxtor D740X 40GB 7200RPM
Pioneer 16X DVD (Slotload..! whoo hoo!!)
AOpen 24x10x40x CD-RW
MS Intellimouse Optical
Altek Lansing Spk.
Windows XP Pro
And that was months ago... most of that stuff is going for less than it was when I bought it. Now... you will want more HD space... so either get a bigger drive (80-120) or get a couple 60's and do a RAID-0 configuration... but that's a little more complicated so you might wanna just go with a bigger drive.
I can also second the recommendation of N-track... it's a very easy to use, yet powerful piece of software... and it's cheap as dirt.
If you start out with a set-up like that,... you'll have 6 Grand left to play with on mics and mixers... which is plenty good to get some top quality stuff... (and for that, I'll let someone else recommend, since I'm still new at mics and mixers myself)
WATYF
(muuahahahahahaaaa!!!!)
I am a computer geek.. so I'll be able to give you some advice on that... And since I use my setup to record songs for the Youth Group worship band I play in... I can assure you all these parts are demon-free. (and dolphin-free for that matter).

I can't give you as much advice as I'd like to for the mics/mixers/and what not... but on computers,.. I can help. And just so you know... you have a pretty nice budget... (for around here). If I had 7 Large to throw around I'd be doin' purdy nice.
First off... P4 or AMD... well... the simple answer to that is...
AMD... duh.

O.K... So it's not so simple of an answer... but... the more you save on the cost of the 'puter.. the more you get to spend on the gear, which (major point here!!!) is much more important that which processor you choose. The best P4 right now can take an AMD in some apps... but the cost is more than twice as much (if not more.. compare $470 to $200) and the performance increase isn't enough to justify it. Also note that certain software is sometimes optimized for a particular CPU... so keep that in mind. Having said that.... I'd go with this. (you did ask for specifics)
CPU: Athlon XP 2000+ or 2100+ (dirt cheap right now)
Mobo: Get either a VIA KT266a chipset board or an AMD 761 board. Either way you're good. The VIA's have had some issues in the past... most of which are resolved... but if you want to play it ultra-safe, get an AMD based board. In which case you'd want to go with an Asus or Gigabyte board with the AMD 761 chipset. If you want to try the KT266a (which I actually recommend) then go with a Soyo Dragon plus (or ultra if you feel like going DDR333) or Asus K7V266-E. The Soyo is a super-stable board and outperforms a good deal of the other KT266a boards... which, keep in mind, all outperform the AMD based boards.

HDD: Maxtor Diamond Max Plus series (D740X).
O/S: I would definitely go with Windows XP Pro. I'm no big Micro$oft fan... and I know Windows has its short-comings.. (most of which I loathe) but XP is by far the best Windows O/S yet. I am more than pleased with it. (and I've used every one of 'em since 3.1) I have yet to have any kind of instability problems or annoying hassles with installation of drivers or what not. (Of course, my mobo helps with the stability)
Just for an example.. I built this set-up for less than a grand.
AMD Athlon XP1900+
(Volcano 6cu HS/F)
Soyo Dragon Plus Mobo
512MB Kingston PC2100
128MB GeForce4 Ti4200 (soon)
Maxtor D740X 40GB 7200RPM
Pioneer 16X DVD (Slotload..! whoo hoo!!)
AOpen 24x10x40x CD-RW
MS Intellimouse Optical
Altek Lansing Spk.
Windows XP Pro
And that was months ago... most of that stuff is going for less than it was when I bought it. Now... you will want more HD space... so either get a bigger drive (80-120) or get a couple 60's and do a RAID-0 configuration... but that's a little more complicated so you might wanna just go with a bigger drive.
I can also second the recommendation of N-track... it's a very easy to use, yet powerful piece of software... and it's cheap as dirt.
If you start out with a set-up like that,... you'll have 6 Grand left to play with on mics and mixers... which is plenty good to get some top quality stuff... (and for that, I'll let someone else recommend, since I'm still new at mics and mixers myself)
WATYF