<div style='font: bold 10pt ; text-align: left; '>What I bought was the SN41G2 that you can find on
www.shuttle.com.
SN41G2 FN41 nForce2 Mobo
AMD Athlon 2500+ Barton CPU (these are cheap as DIRT, and a good chip to boot, but Im waiting for the 3200+ to drop in price atm).
1GB Corsair Value Select RAM (PC3200, CAS 2.5)
Seagate 120GB HD 7200RPM w/ 8mb buffer
Some DVD/CD-RW combo drive
Samsung 152s 15" LCD screen (15" viewable that is)
And I just picked up an ATI Radeon 9800SE (256bit) video card.
I bought the systems all at the same time in August besides the video card. The system has onboard GF4 MX graphics, which really is quite good for onboard graphics and ran any game I tossed at it well (DAoC, Battle Field 1942, Warcraft 3, etc.).
All together for the Shuttle, CPU, RAM, Hard Drive, Screen, Combo Drive, Keyboard/mouse and a carrying case it cost me around $1600 canadian (which is around $1200 USD atm). Toss in another 200-300 US for a good video card and you are in your price range.
The only thing you have to take into account with Shuttle's is you can't leave them on for a week straight at a time. Well, I've never tried, but its cooled by heat pipes with one fan on the back cooling the grid it uses to get rid of the heat, and then the power supply fan. The hard drive doesn't get any airflow. I just turn the thing off when I'm asleep, or if I'm doing some heavy downloading I put it in standby mode and leave it on. It DOES run warmer than a normal PC, but WELL within the safety range of the chip (mine runs at around 46 Celcius full load, I have the same chip in a full PC and it runs at around 34 Celcius).</div>