AlphaWolf said:
Alright, then heres what you do.
Call 1-800-456-3355, option #1, after the prompt enter 69937, then option #5, then option #3. The salesperson will ask you some information about yourself. After you two break the ice, ask the salesperson about part number 4D597. He/She will then inform you that its an nvidia 32MB card, as well as the current price. You can then place an order for it, and they will send it to you. After you complete the order, they are supposed to inform you of the warranty information for the part, and they should say that its warranted for 90 days or the remaining warranty of your computer, whichever is longer.
Well, everytime I have ever asked them *anything* about the warranty, its either "I don't know" or "No, that does not void your warranty".
* AlphaWolf shrugs
But, lets assume that dell did void your warranty. How the hell are they supposed to tell that you opened up your laptop? There arent any warranty seals anywhere on dell laptops, unlike other brands that have them all over. For all dell could know or prove, I just ordered that card as an ornament for my mantle.
Nay, its already got a new owner. Besides, your laptop might even be compatible with an M9. It's only the geforce 4 thats very picky about motherboards IIRC. The main concern is your screen.
Well, thanks for the info. I'll certaintly give it a try.
As for the M9, I don't think so. I have an Inspiron 8000, Which has an 815e intel chipset mobo (they later offered a modified 815e, I think it was an 815em or something like that, which had some minor changes such as speedstep work properly.

)I think they upgraded the mobo's when they upgraded the 8000 to the 8100, one reason would be supporting the M9. I'm nearly certain that my mobo (and bios for that matter!) only supports the M4 and the 2go. I'd love to be informed otherwise, however.
Obviously the 2go would be a far better card for N64 emulation (not much faster, though, ironically the 32mb M4 (and only the 32mb one) has a 350mhz ramdac as opposed to the 250mhz? one,) and it's decently fast for N64 emulation, it even has a proper framebuffer! Too bad ATI/Dell doesn't give a crap about making a proper API for the damn thing. The real question is is how much of a compatibility/feature upgrade would it be...is it worth tearing my system apart, possibly (albeit unlikely) fucking it up royally (which, for sure, is not covered under warranty.)
Now, about my screen...why? What's the deal with my screen? I for sure have a nice high-quality screen. As I said, REFURBISHED Dell charged $650 for them, new IIRC they are nearly $900 for the SXGA and $1000 for UXGA. I'm very happy with my screen...my new one doesn't have a single dead pixel!
(Dell replaced it, for free, 'cause when I sent in my system "under warranty" they said it wasn't covered due to my negligence (which it was, realistically,) citing that I opened it as *one* reason, they said the screen needed to be replaced as well, due to a stain over about 1/8th in the corner. They refuse to fix just what you want, if you want the warranty to be valid you have to fix anything that even RESEMBLES not PERFECT, and the price was RIDICULOUSLY high (I wound up paying $700 to fix a 2 year old machine! Damn the fact I didn't have an extra $200 to buy a better one,) they didn't charge for the screen otherwise there would be no way in hell it would be worth it.)
If it wasn't for the video card, and the FSB/memory type, I'd be very happy with my machine, confident it would last me another 2 years...
(Small side note: is it even possible to build a laptop, or *really* upgrade an existing one? Proper casing & cooling systems would be near impossible to design, I think.)
-------
Back on the topic of resolution, would setting a special resolution of 700x525 really be worth it? Would having the N64 plugin do the scaling, in this case, instead of my video card be worth it? (or does the N64 plugin do more than simple "scaling," rendering at the set resolution, thus making the graphics better?)
(Another side note: I suggest not to buy an XGA or SXGA screen if you plan on gaming. They scale properly to NOTHING. Go for the UXGA, which can scale 2x 800x600, or if money is an issue, an SXGA offers very little benefit over an XGA, however with the SXGA you can do 2x 640x480 (and 320x240) non-scaled and have a near full screen...I have said, however, that i've never noticed scaling problems.)