DGX is recommended, used it for mine, system glitches at 1st or 2nd try, makes boot times alot faster BTW, I guess it would be easier for ya to buy a JTAged/RGH´d system instead of doing it yourself.
Maybe perhaps but i like the feel to have both worlds like able to connect to Xbox Live retail side & able to access Xbox 360 Launcher
Wont happen with a XDK, they cannot go to live only PNet. On a JTag/RGH you cannot go live, except you install a dual(or triple Nand) with e.g. 1 retail live nand and 1 glitched nand
This thread is an example of why I love the Assembler community. Even though you guys started off bad, you resolved your conflict and ended up coming out with a stronger relationship. I may just sound like a dumbass but that is why I like this site over any other, the people are kind, accepting, and tight-knitted.
I would suggest selling the jasper, or trading it with a sum of money for a pre glitched slim with a dual nand. And if you need help with the software side of things ill help you out.
Personally, I would suggest keeping the jasper and having someone who's known to do professional quality installations of RGH setups to do the job for you. Jaspers are my favorite 360 revision, but Falcons are probably the most "stable" when it comes to RGH. My main 360 I use for all sorts of reasons is a 512 MB NAND Jasper, it has a Coolrunner RevC, TX DemoN for a dual NAND setup and programming of the NAND chips via USB. My DemoN has a 16MB NAND, so my console is practically a 512/16MB Jasper, which is nice for various reasons. With some minor tweaking, it's glitching within 1-2 seconds, which is pretty nice considering I was using a homemade chip around the time RGH first surfaced publicly. If you're going to go down this route, make sure the person who performs the job provides you a disc containing your original NAND dumps, DVD and CPU keys, and possibly some information on updating the kernel revision later down the line so you won't have any trouble for when you do have to update. Yeah, even if you are experienced with soldering, it's not too difficult to screw your 360 up when you're doing an RGH installation for the first time. The 48 Mhz standby clock point that's been commonly used for a lot of glitch chips can be a bit tricky, and if you're not careful you could accidentally melt the resistors, or pull the soldered wire bringing the trace with it. This isn't too difficult to repair if you know how, but on my first RGH installation this is what happened to me.
Thank You everyone for your Great suggestions (didn't even know this thread was still continuing lol) but anyways if it weren't for you guys i'd probably would've gave up but you guys actually tend to help even after i finished to what i was needed the most! Thank You All!!