Seems like a pretty weird idea. Thoughts?

  • @Venat0r
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    461 year ago

    Sounds dumb, you don’t need the battery, display, game controller or small form factor for a server. Just get a single board computer.

    • vlad
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      191 year ago

      Id say there’s no harm in playing around to see what happens, but I agree that there’s no practical application to this. At least that I can think of.

    • @runjun
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      171 year ago

      Not the most optimal solution but it is entirely self contained and has a long lasting “UPS”.

        • @SuperIce
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          1 year ago

          You don’t need the most specced out steam Deck though. A refurbished 64GB steam Deck at $320 is an insane deal for the hardware and you likely don’t need more than 64GB for a basic home server.

    • @gornius
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      1 year ago

      Or just get used laptop with destroyed screen for $60. Way better performance than RPI or clones for same price and built-in “UPS”.

      • @FlexibleToast
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        31 year ago

        I’ve never thought to look for laptops with broken screens. That’s a pretty good idea.

  • @[email protected]
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    111 year ago

    I mean you can but it’s a big waste of most of the hardware. Better to use an old desktop or laptop as a server

  • *dust.sys
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    1 year ago

    Probably not going to be worth it for a while, but some folks in a couple of years are going to have old Steam Decks they can’t use anymore for gaming, and they might benefit from this. If nothing else, I hope that this becomes one more way to recycle one more piece of technology.

  • @[email protected]
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    31 year ago

    Eh, looks like a (sorta) fun project. But you can turn pretty much any Linux machine into a home server, so this isn’t really that surprising - and as plenty have pointed out here, there are better hardware choices.

    I have a file/dns server in my basement that is built of my desktop upgrade leftovers. Every so often I swap out the mobo/cpu and reinstall a Debian flavor of some sort. Run my setup scripts, start up my docker services and hey, presto! My server abides.

  • @Shrek
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    21 year ago

    It seems like more of a “fun project”. I wouldn’t waste the resources, but I have servers already. I could see this as a great way to try out self-hosting if you haven’t before. As long as you don’t remove SteamOS (in the video, he kept both) then, it’s not hurting anything.

  • @Russianranger
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    11 year ago

    Unfortunately he lost me when he said he dual booted Debian. Was hoping for something with docker/distrobox that could allow for root without being wiped on updates. I already dual boot SteamOS and windows 10, and run very small solo servers for things like Everquest.

    My ideal solution is finding a way to containerize a server like that, launch it via game mode along with the client to make the most use of Steam Input. I can do it on the windows side of the house, but requires things like Glosi and playnite to get setup, and just isn’t as streamlined as I would like it to be.