• oni
    link
    52 hours ago

    I had to buy a lenovo thinkcentre mini because was cheaper than a brandnew raspberry pi.

  • THCDenton
    link
    31 hour ago

    I still like vms on digital ocean. I guess I’m a seething soydev.

  • @Agent641
    link
    153 hours ago

    This struggle usually takes place over a weekend.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    275 hours ago

    i think the best choice is a cheap used pc or laptop, or server. Reduces electric waste. I also host my own server on a 19 year old Dell Insprion 1300

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      62 hours ago

      Reduces electric waste

      A lot of older equipment actually wastes more electricity.

      But it will cut down on electronic waste.

      • Possibly linux
        link
        fedilink
        English
        12 hours ago

        Not necessarily.

        A i5-6500 has a TDP of 65W while a i5-13600K has a TDP of 150W.

        If you get something modern that has the performance of a i5-6500 it will be a little bit more efficient. The key is that more performance uses more power.

        • @Blue_Morpho
          link
          234 minutes ago

          13600K

          If you buy a high watt CPU, that’s on you. Ryzen 7 also came out in 2022 and had many 65 watt cpus that could outperform an i5-6500.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      94 hours ago

      Yes, but also no. Older hardware is less power efficient, which is a cost in its own right, but also decreases backup runtime during power failure, and generates more noise and heat. It also lacks modern accelerated computing, like ai cores or hardware video encoders or decoders, if you are running those appd. Not to mention lack of nvme support, or a good NIC.

      For me a good compromise is to recycle hardware upgrades every 4-5 years. A 19 year old computer? I would not bother.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        33 hours ago

        I have a Lenovo M710q with a i3 7100T that uses 3W at idle. I’m not mining bitcoin, server is idle 23h a day if not more.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      53 hours ago

      Yeah what I’ve always done is use the previous gaming/workstation PC as a server.

      I just finished moving my basic stuff over to newer old hardware that’s only 6-7 years old, to have lots of room to grow and add to it. It’s a 9700k (8c/8t) with 32GB of ram and even a GTX 1080 for the occasional video transcode. It’s obviously overkill right now, but I plan to make it last a very long time.

    • @Valmond
      link
      125 hours ago

      Think centre tiny here

      Low consumption, two ddr4 slots, one 2.5" slot and one nvme slot! Lots of outside slots.

      Costed less used than a new pi too. They have gotten too expensive IMO.

      • oni
        link
        22 hours ago

        lenovo thinkcentre m910q supremacy

        • @Valmond
          link
          1
          edit-2
          54 minutes ago

          Yesss I have a m910q as my main with (IIRC) a 6500T 4 cores.

          And a m710 with the CD contraption for backup (the CD is just for fun, the PC is the backup) :-p

      • @cellardoor
        link
        54 hours ago

        Same mentality but HP Elitedesk Minis

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          2
          edit-2
          3 hours ago

          Just add dell micro to the list and you have what I run - 9 tiny/mini/micro PCs run everything here. Though I may move a few things to a VPS soon.

          Edit:

          • (4) Dell Micros
          • (3) Lenovo Tinys
          • (2) HP Minis
          • @Valmond
            link
            255 minutes ago

            How would you class them, if you think you could/would/should? I’m so impressed with the thinkcentre tiny I wonder if it can get better at all.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              147 minutes ago

              Mostly equitable.

              Ive had a slightly higher failure rate with the Dells, but the sample size is too small to be relevant.

              The Lenovos more often than others ive found outfitted with a dGPU which comes in handy in some scenarios, but I think that comes down more on which enterprises more often purchase Lenovos and want the dGPU, and that its just what ive come across in the used/decommissioned territory.

              Short answer - they are basically all the same.

  • @RedTie13
    link
    12 hours ago

    I bought a decade old Z840 and it’s great for VMs, Plex, Arr stack, and a few other services but it is so overkill with 2 GPUs. I think what I should’ve done was buy a couple of used desktops or laptops to expand the my homelab as I needed.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    556 hours ago

    I need a kubernetes cluster with high availability, load balancing and horizontal pod autoscaling, because that is something I want to learn. I don’t care that it’s just for wife’s home-made dog collars webshop.

    • Dran
      link
      115 hours ago

      This is the way

      • @ikidd
        link
        English
        3
        edit-2
        3 hours ago

        I don’t get this; a Pi isn’t even in the same conversation as an old rackmount server you can get for free. You couldn’t stuff half the compute, ram and storage into a Pi or a dozen Pis for 10X the cost of grabbing something off eBay for a hundred bucks.

        That’s if the Rpi Foundation is deigning to let us peasants even buy them these days.

        • methodicalaspect
          link
          fedilink
          English
          33 hours ago

          I have an old rackmount server I got for free. Dual Xeon X5650s, 192GB of RAM, four 8TB HDDs, and a pair of 250GB SSDs. I can only use it in the basement because it’s too loud to run anywhere else, but even then, it’s currently off because it trips its circuit breaker under heavy load.

          A power strip full of Pis in a k3s cluster doesn’t do that. I used a 2GB model 4 for the control plane and 3Bs as the workers.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          23 hours ago

          The problem is that server will probably use more electricity, it’ll be clunky to store, and it’s going to be loud as fuck.

    • @khannie
      link
      English
      25 hours ago

      I’m not sure if I’m alone in this but I have a terrible aversion to transcoding. I know the loss of quality is probably not that huge (depending on the original codec) but I just can’t bring myself to get past it.

      As a result I have a tiny arm based box with a 2tb SSD and I’m happy out.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        85 hours ago

        You want to avoid it everywhere possible of course.

        But when the GF tries to use Jellyfin on whatever random device that doesn’t have the codec support to play it, it is nice to have.

        • @khannie
          link
          English
          14 hours ago

          Yeah that makes a lot of sense in fairness.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            24 hours ago

            Trash.guides can help ya setup profiles so it won’t ever transcode unless the the above reason happens

    • @ritchie
      link
      57 hours ago

      That’s what Iam aiming for at the next hardware update. I don’t have the space for a server rack and a SFF desktop would also not fit into my home, so a miniPC it’ll be. I cannot wait to move to x86.

  • Possibly linux
    link
    fedilink
    English
    -22 hours ago

    Raspberry Pis are way overhyped and overpriced.

    Also this is totally wrong. Once you start it just keeps growing unless there is some other factor.

  • MrMobius
    link
    fedilink
    34 hours ago

    Wait, you can host a website on a raspberry pi !? But is it really cheaper than shared hosting, for instance? And even then, quality-wise, it cannot be that good, can it?

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      63 hours ago

      Same as a 4x CPU with 8GB ram VPS.
      Unless bandwidth is a limiting factor.
      But the quality of a website is about code. Not about hardware

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      23 hours ago

      You can definitely run a low traffic website with a Pi. You can run Minecraft Servers and such on Pis. Especially on Pi4s.

    • @[email protected]OP
      link
      fedilink
      229 hours ago

      Yeah, I enjoyed my time with k3s setup at home as well, but right now I don’t really want nor need that 😄

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    659 hours ago

    Switched from a raspberry pi 3 to a second hand x86 thin client (lenovo thinkcentre m920q) because raspberry pi 4 were not available at the time. Made me learn proxmox and a bunch of other cool stuff my raspi couldn’t handle.

    I’m rooting for ARM / RISC-V to become more popular in desktop computing / servers though.

    • mesamune
      link
      English
      419 hours ago

      I’ve always liked riscv. Just the idea of literally everything on the device being open source is a fun idea. Manuals to everything.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      69 hours ago

      Waiting for proxmox-arm becoming a thing (I know there’s some community versions trying it but I’m not sure how reliable they are)

      • @ArbiterXero
        link
        79 hours ago

        The hardware virtualisation available for arm just isn’t there yet

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          48 hours ago

          Apple Silicon Macs do a great job with virtualization. Outside of them there’s just no nice high end hardware that’s well suited for something like proxmox. It’s either low end SBC, or the hyper proprietary ARM servers that I don’t think we can even buy.

          • @ArbiterXero
            link
            18 hours ago

            Those are heavily customised, we’re talking raspberry pi’s here

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      27 hours ago

      Is there RISC-V hardware already? I thought the specification was still under development.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        4
        edit-2
        22 minutes ago

        Very much so, not quite ready for prime time maybe, but you can play with it, StarFive is quite well-known for their chips in this space for example

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        24 hours ago

        There are some Raspi competitors offering SBCs with RISC-V chips, there is even a RISC-V Mainboard for the framework laptops, but the last time I checked they sadly didn’t reach the performance levels of comparable ARM chips.

  • Badabinski
    link
    fedilink
    97 hours ago

    I spend all day at work exploring the inside of the k8s sausage factory so I’m inured to the horrors and can fix basically anything that breaks. The way k8s handles ingress and service discovery makes it absolutely worth it to me. The fact that I can create an HTTPProxy and have external-dns automagically expose it via DNS is really nice. I never have to worry about port conflicts, and I can upgrade my shit whenever with no (or minimal) downtime, which is nice for smart home stuff. Most of what I run tends to be singleton statefulsets or single-leader deployments managed with leases, and I only do horizontal for minimal HA, not at all for perf. If something gives me more trouble running in HA than it does in singleton mode then it’s being run as a singleton.

    k8s is a complex system with priorities that diverge from what is ideal for usage at home, but it can be really nice. There are certain things that just get their own VM (Home Assistant is a big one) because they don’t containerize/k8serize well though.