Hi Fifty. You could try Chessmaster 9000 (should be about $10 after shipping on Amazon or eBay). It's popular among quite a few aficionados here (Panzar for one). I'm not crazy about it though. The lectures by Josh Waitzkin (an International Master) are decent but too advanced for a beginner (he moves & talks a little fast even for me).
If you want a stand-alone chess computer you can get a number of fairly reasonably priced ones. I actually just bought
this one* today for my current roommate (who's been letting me stay with him rent free & is pretty enthusiastic about getting good).
*
if you buy thru that site use promo code: CLEAR08 , save 5%
Personally though, Fifty, I'd recommend just finding some kids who play in your area & just playing a bunch of games with them. I prefer playing humans to computers &, if I hadn't got my ass kicked hundreds of times in college I wouldn't have gotten stirred up enough to actually dedicate myself to it. There's probably a chess club in your college, you should just show up & get involved. It's a good felling working your way up & starting to beat the kids who could once pwn you consistently. IMO, there's something about OTB (over the board) chess that you just don't get against a computer or even an online human opponent (though playing people I "know" like Mehmed & col is almost, but not quite, the same).
Also, while software is good, I'd recommend books even more, especially in the beginning. Susan Polgar has some pretty good beginner books. "Logical Chess Move by Move" is another classic that you can probably pick up at your college or local library (or used online for $5 or $6).
Also, you could type in something like "basic chess strategy" or "beginning chess" or "basic tactics" + chess into YouTube. There are actually a lot of really good videos on there.
Anyway, I wouldn't spend any/much money right off. Just read some basic books or websites (just type in some of the above youtube searches into Google) & join a chess club. Try to play against friendly, fairly good, players who will tell you what you did wrong when you lose. Once in awhile, play against other beginners so you can win a few (for confidence, I'm not patronizing, btw, this was important for me cause if I got my ass kicked too much & only played much stronger players I probably would've gotten burnt out & quit. IIRC, Kasporov once said (paraphrase), "play stronger players (and probably lose) as much as you can stand".
Anyway, I'm always enthusiastic to see people getting into chess (or anything else I'm into), so if you have any homies at school that play I'd ask them to help you get into it. It'll be a cool feeling if, thru enthusiasm & persistence, you are able to beat them within a few months/year/whatever.
Cheers,
Narz
