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Antonizoon edited this page Nov 22, 2014 · 6 revisions

Requirements

  • Reliability - The server has to remain online 24/7. If you're far away from your server, you're not going to be able to make physical repairs, so the board had better be reliable.
  • High-speed Storage Options - The main purpose of a server is to host files, so ideally, the hard drive should connect using SATA or USB 3.0.
  • Low Power Usage - It's just a home server, so you don't want to spend too much on electricity.

Uses

  • VPN - A sort of upgraded, encrypted form of a proxy. Great for bypassing paywalls when you visit other countries, or just keeping your internet browsing and cookies safe from snoops.
  • Media Streaming Server - Stream your videos, TV Shows, and movies anywhere in the world, or just anywhere in the house.
  • Personal Cloud Storage (File Server) - If you're away from the house often, want terabytes of cloud storage on the cheap, or just don't trust cloud providers; build your own personal cloud file server, so you can access any of your Terabytes of information anywhere in the world. No third-parties or service charges.
  • Torrent Seedbox - Don't leave your laptop on all day. Have a server do the mundane work of torrenting for you. Also makes it possible to permanently seed torrents on the cheap.

Raspberry Pi

A $35 ARM board. Uses less power than a lightbulb. Unfortunately, it only uses a USB 2.0 bus, which can slow access speeds down quite a bit (especially torrents), so basic, low-traffic server tasks only.

ODROID

If you're looking for something more powerful than the Raspberry Pi, but under $100, the ODROID is for you. It uses the same Exynos processors as the famed Samsung Galaxy S series.

Intel NUC

The Intel Next Unit of Computing is the Cadillac of sub-$200 server boxes. If you need a powerful x86 home server with SATA support, this is the way to go.

Tutorial

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Misc

Personal Groundbreaking Projects

Useful Tools

Strange New Devices

Devices that Time Forgot

Refurb Log

Open-Source Hardware

  • Libreboot/Coreboot
  • HPLIP Printers - A massive family of common and cheap printers, that you can probably find from the junkyard. Most of them use open source drivers, and all work out of the box with Linux and HPLIP. Great for printing Bitcoin paper wallets.

Vintage Computing

Experimental Projects

Tips and Tricks

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