I’ve never done any sort of home networking or self-hosting of any kind but thanks to Jellyfin and Mastodon I’ve become interested in the idea. As I understand it, physical servers (“bare metal” correct?) are PCs intended for data storing and hosting services instead of being used as a daily driver like my desktop. From my (admittedly) limited research, dedicated servers are a bit expensive. However, it seems that you can convert an old PC and even laptop into a server (examples here and here). But should I use that or are there dedicated servers at “affordable” price points. Since is this is first experience with self-hosting, which would be a better route to take?

  • chingadera@lemmy.world
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    21 hours ago

    I bought a used m920q for this reason, still working on it, I’m at the docker-compose phase

    • pezhore@infosec.pub
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      20 hours ago

      Those are beasts! My homelab has three of them in a Proxmox cluster. I love that for not a ton of extra money you can throw in a PCIe expansion slot and the power consumption for all three is less than my second hand Dell Tower server.

      • chingadera@lemmy.world
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        20 hours ago

        Do you have any good resources I can look at to see if a cluster is something I should look into?