NAS vs. Home Server - What's the difference?

2023 ж. 17 Жел.
239 953 Рет қаралды

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  • After some deliberation, I've decided to cut out the part of the video criticizing LTT, der8auer and Level1Tech for "ruining the concept of a home server". Linus, Roman and Wendell are all creators that I respect and look up to. In hindsight, criticizing them for the 'sins' of their respective audiences was not fair. As creators, we're not always responsible for our audiences, and definitely shouldn't be held accountable for the few "bad apples" among our viewers who walk away with a wrong idea after watching our content. The 'criticism' on my end came from a place of frustration. A lot of negative comments under my videos are basically a person hearing something from a big tech channel, and then parroting it as an absolute truth that applies in all situations (e.g. "HDDs are dead, you should only be using SSDs). That being said, this is not something Linus, Wendell or Roman have any control over and definitely not something they should be criticized for. All three creators make absolutely clear that their 'overkill' builds are just that - overkill, and aren't meant as realistic build suggestions. So if any of the aforementioned creators watch this video (I doubt it) and wonder what's up with all the LTT bashing in the comments - now you know, and sorry about that 🙃

    @WolfgangsChannel@WolfgangsChannel4 ай бұрын
    • Guess what, i build a "NAS" with a Supermicro Server Mainboard, pretty decent Xeon CPU and ECC Memory - so while "technicly" an ordinary Server by Hardware, it's function is "just" being a NAS. (and before anyone screems "wastage", it's rather old hardware i shot for under 200 bucks +PSU i had laying around anyway (Silverstone Strider Platinum 550W) +Case (edit: oh, and ofc the 700 bucks worth of hard drives xP) - so yea, will not be the most power efficient build but also barrely started up as it's for long or rather "intermediate" storage) while i could do more with it, i rather rent a server than running it 24/7 in my home - just a philosophical debate - what matters in the end is to get the job done. Edit2: agree, it's the function that defines a device and not the capabilities of it's hardware - else you could define todays office PC's as "Gaming PCs", as they certainly overpower 90s Hardware, and propably could play 90s games much faster too xD (miss the old days of frequency bound games - nope^^)

      @BlackRedDead1943@BlackRedDead19433 ай бұрын
    • NAS

      @nazariiboichyshyn4300@nazariiboichyshyn43002 ай бұрын
    • Did Linus remove the tape first before building his NAS and reviewing it?

      @user-hm9is5ke9i@user-hm9is5ke9iАй бұрын
    • Wolfgang, LTT should be bashed. They are one long infomercial trying to pass themselves off as being unbiased reviewers. That isn't even taking into account all the errors they make and try and shift the blame and never take any responsibility for.

      @christopherjames9843@christopherjames9843Ай бұрын
    • @@christopherjames9843 idk about bashed, but being taken with a huge grain of salt/skepticism, i agree but that they would "always" behave that described way is simply untrue and unfair towards all the great ppl at LTT - never forget there's a bunch of ppl, some are doing great in a mediocre company with some narcistic asshole running it - you can't blame each and everyone of them! - stick to those that are actually wrongdoing!

      @BlackRedDead1943@BlackRedDead1943Ай бұрын
  • A server is a role given to a computer, this means anything can potentially be a server

    @ajv_2089@ajv_20894 ай бұрын
    • Technically if your server doesn't have 200PB of Nvme SSD storage in RAID 69, 1.2TB of DDR52 ECC memory, quad redundant 2000W PSU's, an Intel Pro Ultra Xeon Sapphire Rapid 128 core CPU and 200K RPM fans, it's not a server.

      @DamienWhite@DamienWhite4 ай бұрын
    • Pretty much if it hosts or quite literally “serves” content, it is by definition a server, and anything connecting to it, is a client. You host a game lobby for your friends? Your computer is a server. You can even take the definition further with calling certain programs servers, things like display and sound servers come to mind.

      @SS-ARYAN@SS-ARYAN4 ай бұрын
    • @@SS-ARYAN Yea I suppose the term "server" can be divorced from the hardware as long as it is paired with a client. Separating the term "NAS" from hardware could be done but doesn't fit as well. I suppose the key difference is the storage. So a NAS is a specialized type of server?

      @drewwilson8756@drewwilson87564 ай бұрын
    • @@drewwilson8756 Every home server has storage. What makes it a NAS is that the home server is configured to offer that storage space to other clients on the network. NAS vs Home Server is a stupid conversation to be having.

      @toodarkpark@toodarkpark4 ай бұрын
    • Indeed. Sometimes my phone is a server. Although phones are really bad as servers due to their intermittent connectivity.

      @thewhitefalcon8539@thewhitefalcon85394 ай бұрын
  • Building small, power-efficient servers that suit the budget and use cases of an average guy is way more interesting than builds that none of us can even dream of imo

    @DMSBrian24@DMSBrian244 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, I personally only watch stuff like LTT because it's basically nerd porn lol It's a shame that life is mostly people watching KZheadrs and living vicariously because we can't afford to live our own lives :

      @3nertia@3nertia4 ай бұрын
    • Yes I agree

      @mastermluck@mastermluck4 ай бұрын
    • Most of us cannot dream of those builds, but let's be honest, most of us don't need those builds either. What on the Earth the majority of the homelabbers would do with 128 core Threadripper beast? Yeah, there are people who needs that performance but I'm sure 99.999% of homelabbers don't need that at home. Even if I would have tens of thousends of dollars at my disposal I wouldn't buy or build a powerhouse to have it idle on me on 0.1% capacity all year long.

      @batorihunor@batorihunor4 ай бұрын
    • Right, because using technology to make your life better in ways you didn't know how to is exciting!

      @greatwavefan397@greatwavefan3974 ай бұрын
    • ​​@@greatwavefan397Partially disagree, I personally see it as overspending, wasteful and overconsuption for 99.99% Why spend 10-100 times more if it already does job well and reliable. Linus group produced like 20+ videos a week with 100+ employees many working with like 8k raw footage also they get all this tech for free or for content. They would put 10gb internet into microwave oven if it get views. I would get to my destination faster and more cheap in 10 y.o. toyota than new maclaren (because we have like 2-3 roads that somewhat be suitable to drive that car at all othervise it would get destroyed in a day, I don't even mention that you can't drive that car at all, due to winter for almost half a year as there are a lot of snow).

      @myentertainment55@myentertainment554 ай бұрын
  • Let's not forget that in those LTT videos, it's always emphasized that these overkill machines don't make much sense for consumers. They also have videos on repurposing your old PC as a home server, highlighting that mini PCs, SOCs, and even old office desktops are surprisingly powerful these days for server use. It's not the creators' fault; it's the audience. These are the same people who insist on needing a specific GPU tier for gaming, a certain number of HP for a car, etc... My home server runs on a 2400G, and it's fantastic-constantly underutilized.

    @generic13372@generic133724 ай бұрын
    • I agree

      @WolfgangsChannel@WolfgangsChannel4 ай бұрын
    • I use a 9700T (35W) limited to 4 cores (can enable more if I ever need) and a RPI 3B+ :P

      @guiorgy@guiorgy4 ай бұрын
    • I use a Raspberry pi 4B 4GB, which is running a NAS, Home assistant, VPN, Octoprint, and it doesn't break a sweat.

      @Philip_J@Philip_J4 ай бұрын
    • @@Philip_J Exactly - a server build recommended for average consumers is heavily dependent on that individual's needs and budget. Obviously I'd love an overkill DELL R750 with 4 GPUs, Threadripper and TB of memory... but I can't even afford the power bill, let alone the purchase price. And I wouldn't even know what to do with so much horsepower. *Edit for clarification

      @boneappletee6416@boneappletee64164 ай бұрын
    • Ignorance in this day 'n' age has to be willful, right? Lol

      @3nertia@3nertia4 ай бұрын
  • Obviously a NAS isn't a real server. I mean for a server you need a CPU, and storage, and memory, and fast networking... and it should be able to run containers or other server software... 🤔

    @JeffGeerling@JeffGeerling4 ай бұрын
    • NAS can do that, right?

      @user-mt3tp5th5t@user-mt3tp5th5t4 ай бұрын
    • And for a NAS you need a CPU, and storage, and memory, and fast networking, and most NAS focused OS are able to run containers or other server software, Wait a minute...

      @retroree7705@retroree77054 ай бұрын
    • @@user-mt3tp5th5t Right ?

      @YvanDaSilva@YvanDaSilva4 ай бұрын
    • Ayo jeff my boy...love you man :)

      @user-ek5uq6ce2k@user-ek5uq6ce2k4 ай бұрын
    • Are we ever seeing a Geerling + Wolfgang collab? :) I work with IT for over 20 years now, and this two are the most down to earth guys ever.

      @FelipoGoncalves@FelipoGoncalves4 ай бұрын
  • jeff gerling voice randomly is my multiverse of madness

    @amansetia8655@amansetia86554 ай бұрын
    • Suddenly I want a Homeserver KZhead Discord

      @meco@meco4 ай бұрын
    • lmao

      @notabhixhek@notabhixhek4 ай бұрын
    • i didn't noticed the voices until the red owl spoke 😂😂😂😂

      @XashA12Musk@XashA12Musk4 ай бұрын
    • *geerling

      @elwinroyale@elwinroyale4 ай бұрын
    • @@elwinroyale*hello!

      @JeffGeerling@JeffGeerling4 ай бұрын
  • As an enterprise systems administrator, if it counts, I come to your channel regularly as it is the only one that offers affordable and realistic home servers. And yes, I say home servers since, by definition, a server is any computing machine that attends to a client's requests. Ignore the comments of people whose only contact with servers has been the LinusTechTips videos... and continue with those good home server videos!

    @robinkaku@robinkaku4 ай бұрын
    • Im in the same job, at work, i dont need to build geo and fully local resilient services that support over 10M customers, big enterprise servers are needed in this case, but at home it isnt, my home server is more a lab with some *must have* services, and must have means I can afford to lose them for an hour or so. What ive learned through Wolfgangs channel from a power efficiency perspective has actually allowed me to reduce my companies power usage, both from a physical server through to air conditioning perspective. All good :)

      @andyholmes999@andyholmes9994 ай бұрын
    • Indeed. People confuse the designation of the machine with the actual hardware. Even a macbook air can be a server, despite the fact it doesn't have 12 SAS slots, a redundant power supply and a 2U chassis.

      @bufordmaddogtannen@bufordmaddogtannen4 ай бұрын
    • Seconded word for word.

      @udirt@udirt21 күн бұрын
    • ​@bufordmaddogtannen but one totally should always consider getting an Atto thunderbolt to dual port FC box off eBay and letting that Air access a few extra terabytes of SAN storage, especially with how expensive Apple SSD storage is ;-)

      @udirt@udirt21 күн бұрын
  • You inspired me to "downgrade" my home server with a Ryzen 7 1800x and I went with the Topton N5105. I gained hardware video transcoding and my server maxes out at 50 watts instead of 150. I built a console gaming PC with the other parts so it was a win win. I personally think seeing really low cost and low power servers is cooler, tbh. I feel like I'm actually fully utilizing my server hardware instead of a bunch of power pretty much being wasted sitting idle most of the time.

    @DaftBlazer@DaftBlazer4 ай бұрын
    • @DaftBlazer - is the board powerful enough to run Proxmox with several VMs (assuming i give it 32gb RAm and sufficient M.2 storage)

      @gittin_funky@gittin_funky2 ай бұрын
  • Hardware heavens, Jeff Geerlings and RaidOwls voice over cameos where a brilliant move. Well done

    @eikeholz@eikeholz4 ай бұрын
    • I'm pretty sure it's 'Hardware Haven' not *Heaven btw :)

      @boneappletee6416@boneappletee64164 ай бұрын
    • I didn't realize that. Nice move. And thanks for pointing that out.

      @shibby-not-available@shibby-not-available4 ай бұрын
    • I thought that was Raid Owls voice. Thanks for confirming.

      @thespencerowen@thespencerowen4 ай бұрын
    • @@boneappletee6416 I think both could apply. A lot of the hardware that reaches his desk is prepared to die a horrific death in a dump-only to be rescued, cleaned, and put in service in what would be the equivalent of a hardware device's 'heaven' :)

      @JeffGeerling@JeffGeerling4 ай бұрын
    • and nobody recognizes f4mi? Disappointed. (jk)

      @voidmain7902@voidmain79024 ай бұрын
  • That's the point of a HOME server... not an ENTERPRISE server. Great work!

    @pdrsntsfrrr@pdrsntsfrrr4 ай бұрын
  • Before the term NAS even existed it was called a file server.

    @puta1082@puta108223 күн бұрын
    • That's exactly what I was thinking.

      @andrewbeaver1843@andrewbeaver184314 күн бұрын
    • Dedicated File Server - NAS

      @mach1553@mach15533 күн бұрын
  • I suppose some people may not really understand the importance of power efficiency. Especially for those of us living in Europe, there is a clear cost advantage in running newer hardware that sips power compared to enterprise gear. And with the AM4 and AM5 platforms, even running ECC memory is a reality.

    4 ай бұрын
    • Not sure about Europe as a whole, I think the average electricity cost in Finland last year was like 7cents/kWh

      @eliaserke5267@eliaserke52674 ай бұрын
    • Thought the same. In USA electricity prices are a joke compared to europe...

      @krekas@krekas4 ай бұрын
    • yes yes yes

      @Seizuqi@Seizuqi4 ай бұрын
    • Power is expensive in Australia too. I was running a DL585 with 48 cores and 128GB RAM a few years back and it would use $4 per day of electricity. Even the iLO would use $0.40 a day with the server off, so I had a power board I could remotely power off when not needed. I ran VMs to replicate a work environment, AD, file servers, SCVMM, Kubernetes, Ceph etc, so it was useful to have that capability. I also had a HP Microserver serving files and running some VMs, but because it only used about 30W I didn't mind leaving it on. I would consider them both to be servers.

      @gz3zbz@gz3zbz4 ай бұрын
    • And availability of parts is worse here. We don't have all the cheap servers on ebay, the cheap refurbished hard drives, not to mention the space for a massive 42U rack.

      4 ай бұрын
  • Gatekeepers will always gatekeep. Usually the rattlings of the ignorant and/or the unhappy. Great video Wolfgang. Subscribed.

    @nemmeh@nemmeh4 ай бұрын
    • There is a role for gatekeepers. Even if, in this case, it's only to signal their profound levels of ignorance. 😂 I do wonder though... I have a small form factor PC with a decent sized SSD. It's storing files for me, and it's running my Minecraft/Nextcloud. What is that machine in their eyes? 😄

      @herrpez@herrpez4 ай бұрын
    • Gatekeeping is good and necessary. Without gatekeeping there's no such thing as "difference", nothing has meaning, and there's no standards.

      @superslash7254@superslash725416 сағат бұрын
  • I think most of your audience watches your channel, just because you do those builds. Love your videos, keep it up!

    @MH-kc5jr@MH-kc5jr4 ай бұрын
  • Your practical HOME server builds are why I like your channel. I like seeing the high end stuff too but your videos provide actual useful recommendations. If it serves, it's a server.

    @rdwatson@rdwatson4 ай бұрын
  • If we go to source; IEEE Standard Glossary of Computer Networking Terminology says a server is "In a network, a device or computer system that is dedicated to providing specific facilities to other devices attached to the network. Contrast with: client." So by this definition any computer that can interface with other devices on the network, regardless of hardware, qualifies as a server. And if it is in a 'home' it should qualify as a home-server. But, I mean, if KZhead commentators says it is not, who the hell IEEE think they are to disagree!!!

    @oduvenci@oduvenci4 ай бұрын
    • Just wanted to mention this definition too! Or in other words: A server is a compute-thing which serves a service to a client. It's about the role, the purpose, of the compute-thing which makes it a server, not the hardware used. So, a NAS, which serves file storage over network to a client, also often called a "file server", is pretty much a server.

      @DaSannny@DaSannny4 ай бұрын
  • Back in 2010, I was a network manager, in a hospital. We had several servers. No one would ever try to claim that they weren't "real" servers. Any one server did one of two different sets of things. Set One was "Deliver files & control who can access those files." Set Two was "Run a database engine." One of the servers also acted as a Microsoft Domain Controller & DHCP server. Plus, we had a dedicated backup server, connected to the tape drive. That's it. None of those servers had any more than a couple of Pentium II processors. They were pretty lame, but they did the job for over 500 connected users. Mostly because almost all of the processing actually took place out on the desktop. When a user "ran a program," they were literally executing a .EXE file that was delivered to them over the network. Often, that program literally modified database files itself, using nothing but lock files to control which user was modifying which bits when. It as all very old school. And some programs accessed one of those database engines. But still, most of the processing happened at the desktop. Hell, an Apache web server does more actual work delivering a typical MySpace page than these old servers did. But.... No one would ever try to say they weren't "real" servers. Yup, gatekeeping has always been a big problem in the tech "community." I had one guy try to gatekeep me because I didn't write any PERL scripts. While I was the network manager of a hospital. I just chalk it up to insecurity problems, and ignore them.

    @GrantSR@GrantSR4 ай бұрын
  • Even a Raspberry Pi Zero can be a home server. As long as it's at home and serving a service. You'll get the hardware that's best for the needs. Even data centers get the machine that's the best for the job, and not the beefiest.

    @lesumsi@lesumsi4 ай бұрын
  • I really appreciate your builds and the lengths you go to properly balance efficiency and effectiveness... Keep up the good work!

    @Mikesco3@Mikesco34 ай бұрын
  • Long story short, server is a very broad term, it encapsulates any computer/electronic device that can serve information to another device through a network. A NAS *is* a server - that's what makes it different from just putting more drives in your computer, it's in the name, *network-attached*. Even if you use the smallest, simplest microcontroller to connect to the network, it's still a server, even if it only functions within a local network, the protocols used are exactly the same.

    @DMSBrian24@DMSBrian244 ай бұрын
    • I do kinda get the "not a REAL server" mentality, despite it being obviously incorrect, because a lot of the time a prebuilt NAS can be essentially vendor-locked, limited in its functionality, not being able to function as a fully fledged traditional server, so I understand labeling those as "just a NAS" (even though they're still servers).

      @DMSBrian24@DMSBrian244 ай бұрын
    • @@DMSBrian24I agree

      @PatrikKron@PatrikKron4 ай бұрын
  • You made building a home server approachable for me when I found you some years ago. Thank you, never stop.

    @JustDecode@JustDecode4 ай бұрын
  • Love the collabs in this video! I think you've done a great service to the community making this video. I don't see why a server cannot serve storage.

    @TommyThousandFaces@TommyThousandFaces4 ай бұрын
  • Your channel has been a big help for me in getting lower power use, without losing too much in performance and features. Keep doing what you're doing! :)

    @Aruneh@Aruneh4 ай бұрын
  • I am in the process of figuring out how I want to build my home server. Your channel is reasonable when it relates to what and how to build compared to the other channels you mentioned. Thats why a watch it! Keep up the good work!

    @toddmand6451@toddmand64514 ай бұрын
  • Your videos were one of the first if not the first videos I ever watched when I got into home server. Being from the UK, my one and only priority is to build cheap and power efficient servers. Watching your video, I build another small server using Topton motherboard and PicoPSU and I love it and has become my full-time server. With 16 LXCs and 2 VMs (Truenas and CentOS), CPU, utilisation idles around 12%.

    @TheDropForged@TheDropForged4 ай бұрын
  • I've finally finished building my home server with your help and I just want to thank you again for the content you produce, I got to learn a lot from this and have fun while doing it :)

    @virtualnk5825@virtualnk58254 ай бұрын
  • I really enjoy your videos on smart and affordable home servers. That's basically what I want for my apartment that has no dedicated/separate tech room: a small home server that handles backups, media, and might offer processing power if you want to run some docker containers on it or compile code, while not using too much energy, putting too much heat into the room, or being too loud. You provide a lot of inspiration and ideas on what to buy and how to set it up, but I gotta admit I didn't settle for a system yet or buy it - but some day I will for sure.

    @DerRofflers@DerRofflers4 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for bringing the problem of power efficiency on the table. People in IT do not care enough about it, however this subject will become more and more concerning in the next decades... Also, thanks to your videos, I've realized how much hardware have improved on energy efficiency. Anyway, it's very appreciable to watch your content, keep continuing building and bringing knowledge to the world :)

    @Inception-pn1hg@Inception-pn1hg4 ай бұрын
  • Very, very cool that you got your YT content creator friends to do the voice over for the 'comments' 😁😁😁 I thought you had some really amazing voice-changer AI tweaked to do that for you. But, no, those voices were real. Super cool !! (BTW, I am still hoping you'll make a video about a Intel N100 server-build)

    @itssoaztek4592@itssoaztek45924 ай бұрын
  • Love the video, for me it is fun to watch the crazy projects der 8auer and LTT are doing. When it comes to the point of researching stuff for my own homelab I always come back to your channel. Because I know you won´t forget the aspect of power efficiency and lower budget limits. The balance between power consumption and pure performance is very important to me since prices for electrical power is on an alltime high in germany. Thanks for your videos!

    @bene3516@bene35164 ай бұрын
  • "However, I am very petty and also happen to have a lot of free time on my hands" already you have my respect

    @__8120@__81206 күн бұрын
  • I really appreciate your approach to energy efficient servers, a lot of the US-based audience don’t understand the costs of running old enterprise hardware. I’ve been guilty of building on decommissioned enterprise, but I have shifted to building less power-hungry and quieter machines. One thing I would love to see from you is building these types of machines on rack-mount cases (specifically interested in a small rack that you could keep inside your office, with networking hear + a few servers, maybe more interested if they fit in a networking rack which is less deep)

    @h2muller@h2muller4 ай бұрын
    • i would love to see a build based on a topton nas motherboard in a flat rack-mount case.

      @JayJaysen@JayJaysen3 ай бұрын
  • Great video! I spend a lot of time recently on reddit (those are words I'm not sure I should be proud of) trying to explain to first time homelabbers that they don't need to spend $2K on new AMD Ryzen multithread monsters to stream their movies and offload photos and videos from their smartphones. That they can start with a prebuilt NAS and/or a second hand enterprise mini pc for $100 from ebay. It's an uphill battle sometimes because the people you describe that absolutely believe that a prebuilt NAS is completely useless for anything BUT serving files, keep writing walls of text on how they should build out their first rackserver in excrutiating detail... I am about to move my 18 docker containers that I run on my NAS (with a weak 4c CPU and 8GB of ram) to said six, seven year old enterprise mini pc. And I expect that to be a big upgrade that will hold me over for the next few years. Now I might add addtional mini pc's to build a cluster of them. But that is a whole other thing.

    @Jonteponte71@Jonteponte714 ай бұрын
    • "trying to explain to first time homelabbers" oh god i feel you, especially if its in r/selfhosted They are just a buch of fanatics that doesn't want to learn neither understand what they are doing. I talk it a lot about it already in r/selfhosted but my server doesn't use VMs (and consider them to be useless bloat) , and for a lot of them they consider its not a server even tho i can run literally thing easier because AUR (it user arch btw), i also don't use docker but that because want easy configuration, easy interaction between some of my app and lazyness

      @cylian91@cylian914 ай бұрын
  • Those power-efficient home server builds of yours are precisely why I keep visiting your channel. You've got excellent content ideas, presentation and I appreciate your videos!

    @sm5172@sm51724 ай бұрын
  • Great video. I own a synology and it’s plenty powerful to run all the services I need including ad block, plex, home bridge, and few other docker containers. It works flawlessly and never had an issue with performance. I got excited about getting a decommissioned enterprise server but didn’t because I wasn’t sure what else i would do with it except maybe sleep knowing I got one.

    @gkhaled1@gkhaled14 ай бұрын
  • maybe ppl have the wrong definition of what a home server really is. is a dual socket xeon v2 kit with redundant psu from ali a home server? or as mentioned LTT builds? nice that you brought up the comparison between 2023 corei3 vs 2013 xeons. i'm more with you on your power efficiency analysis and SFF wife-friendly builds and self-host/secure/backup/productivity side apps that we modest homelabers care about.

    @CrashLaker@CrashLaker4 ай бұрын
  • 5:02 I will also debate the notion that a "real home server" needs to run VMs. A home server is a machine that _serves_ some amount of services that is located in your home. Nothing more, nothing less. My lowly Raspberry Pi 4 is being used as a home server, with every service running as a Docker container. Is it the most capable server? No. Is it as scalable as a more complex and expensive solution? Also no. Does it serve my current needs? Absolutely it does.

    @static_motion@static_motion4 ай бұрын
    • Im running mini-PC with intel celeron, running ubuntu server with casaos and bunch of dockers for jellyfin tranmission client, smb share and stuff like that so i guess it's also kind of a home server even though i have no VM's or proxmox

      @idan678@idan6784 ай бұрын
  • this is very informative, thanks! I have no clue what to do next so time to binge some of your videos and learn!

    @festival3rocker@festival3rocker2 ай бұрын
  • I am here exactly for thencontent you do. Building simple, cheap and most importantly low power home servers. Thanks for the effort!

    @rklauco@rklauco4 ай бұрын
  • I actually agree with wolfgang, the difference between the 2 in a homelab environment has become defunct since you can run either on just about anything these days, technically speaking you'd be hard pressed to distinguish the difference even in an enterprise environment since in my career almost 25 years ive seen repurposed thin clients being used in the field, hell i run a shucked, repurposed mobile workstation (laptop) in an aftermarket 1U rack mount case running ubuntu server and its currently responsible for 1 part of my self hosted services

    @Jetta4TDIR@Jetta4TDIR4 ай бұрын
  • I use 4th gen intel NUCs (4 machines) as my home servers. Those work great have multiple services on them, including Proxmox as hypervisor. I fully support the idea, that servers could be low budget and low power and somewhat low end hw

    @geflis@geflis4 ай бұрын
  • Ironically this video convinced me to watch your Perfect Home Server video, I saw it in my recommended video before but I thought "nah, I'm just looking for NAS, not a server", but since some people consider it "just" a NAS, maybe it's not overkill for what I'm wanting to build.

    @willprince643@willprince643Ай бұрын
  • Perfect video. Love your builds, please keep doing what you're doing!

    @arielmst@arielmst4 ай бұрын
  • Totally agree that any simple machine can be used as a home lab server so long it gets the job done. My home server, a 4-core, 4GB RAM mini PC 🔥😂, has been reliably providing answers to my queries for almost four years. Running various Docker containers, including my website, Jellyfin, and numerous other services, it operates flawlessly. However, I've recently upgraded to another mini PC featuring a Ryzen 9 processor with 8 cores, 16 threads, and 64GB of RAM. I intend to utilize this system for at least a decade 😂😂."

    @meliodaskun5688@meliodaskun56884 ай бұрын
  • It's so scary to recognize every signle youtuber voice in the vid without seeing any source

    @jayjake@jayjake4 ай бұрын
  • Fantastic video Wolfgang!! Hope you will always have more free time in your hands! Have a great Christmas holiday man!

    @ionamygdalon2263@ionamygdalon22634 ай бұрын
  • One of the best videos on the subject of home servers with a lot of truth in it. Thank you.

    @andreas.grundler@andreas.grundler4 ай бұрын
  • I heard JeffGeerling's voice and immediately recognize it

    @hertgsesrht3499@hertgsesrht34994 ай бұрын
  • I've come across and watched a few videos of yours in the past. I just watched this whole video and because of your tact & class and handling of this situation, you've got a subscriber for life. I have a pretty decent 11th gen Intel build, I also have a 6-year-old q-nep, and a latte panda that I'm trying to consolidate everything into more efficient home server build. Server build. The qnap works, but there's a few more advanced things that I want to do that I feel like the software limits me. So I'm in the process of learning how to build out the latte panda as an unrated server. I'll go back through your videos and see if there's anything I could utilize. Keep up the great work!

    @CharmPeddler@CharmPeddler4 ай бұрын
  • I use a very similar definition as you on my channel. For me, a home server has to have virtualization at least. My server is also an old thin client PC, btw.

    @AndreasSpiess@AndreasSpiess4 ай бұрын
  • I followed your Topton based build and loving it. Thanks!!!

    @tsbspionkop@tsbspionkop4 ай бұрын
  • Man ur server builds are great! All of ur vids are and thought me alot thanks for that i got here in the Netherlands my masters degree thanks largely to ur vids

    @jayverrijt0@jayverrijt03 ай бұрын
  • thank you wolfgang for taking the time to answer the most basic of questions. i find when you ask "experts" basic questions(as you stated) they just brush them off. i can't learn anything if info is gatekept and them being on there high horse with non helping attitude doesn't help either. looking forward to more of your stuff.

    @markpoint1351@markpoint13514 ай бұрын
  • Really enjoyed the video and the voiceover cameos at the beginning.

    @kevinoneill2170@kevinoneill21704 ай бұрын
  • Lol.. love the group of KZheadrs you tapped to read comments. Hardware Haven? Jeff Geerling? Well done!! I don't care for gatekeepers either.. I mean, Isn't a NAS a specialized and scaled file 'SERVER'? When was that 'service' eliminated as a 'service' provided by servers? And seriously, I'd immediately terminate the services of a contractor who tried to sell me on a dual processor Epyc server to provide email and file storage to an office of 4 real estate agents. Now, it might be seriously cool to have one sitting in my basement running nothing but Jellyfin, piHole and in instance of TruNAS.. but it would absolutely be overkill. Until I can afford that kind of power draw on a daily basis though, I'll stick with my i3-4130 idling at 19 watts.. and I'll keep calling it a Server.

    @michaelkane6797@michaelkane67974 ай бұрын
  • You actually made a real point here Wolfgang. My homelab actually has 2 parts: one running the stuff I need at home and which is 24/7 on (storage server, router, very small machine having enough juice to run a DC and a minecraft server based on a very old Core i5 I recovered from a thrown away machine. The thing has a solid 32Gb of RAM. It litterally runs my home on a day to day basis and when it fails, a lot of things go south in the house. But it never did so far. And the day it does, I have some old laptop laying around with a bit less of memory (Minecraft server consumes most, but that is not critical). The only thing I gotta do is connecting the 2 hard drives holding the VM's to it and I am up and running again. Besides of that I got this kind of almost enterprise level machine I built myself based on server grade components: Xeon scalable, 256Gb of RAM, SDD's provide the storage for the VM's. But the thing is: i only spin it up when I need to test a specific infrastructure for work or for studying purposes. Meaning: it is off for most of the time (it has BMC/IPMI on the motherboard, so I can spin it up when I need it. Takes less than 5 min to boot and bring online all of the VMs on it. And even on that machine I made a sin when I hear most of the youtubers: it runs on HyperV for crying out loud.... (did make this choice as it is almost zero maintenance and combined with Microsoft VMM, building a new VM is basically a couple of clicks.) This is the kind of machine a LOT of people think you need to have at home. But they forget that this kind of machines is used to host large database servers, hold VM's for software development and capable of compile large portions of source code in a minimum of time. FOr studying purposes e.g. I need to be able to run Sharepoint server, SCCM, WSUS (yes, I am a MS guy). But guess you all get the point: this is for stuff about 99% of the people do not need at all... So why throw thousands of dollars or Euros in it if you just use it to host a plex server, some photos and 3 or 4 VMs. My take: if you have something between 500 and 1000 euros you can build ALL of the homeserver you need with a ridiculous amount of RAM and redundant storage and a decent processor... Me personally, if I friends ask me to build a homeserver for them (happened a couple of times) this channel is my go to place, and also the NAS Compares channel when it comes to storage {SDDs and HDDs)

    @RealLordy@RealLordyАй бұрын
  • Any that servs is a "server" if people want to be petty. A toaster running Pi-hole is a server. It doesn't have to be some crazy mainframe filling rooms in a dedicated space. I'll prefer anything energy efficient that is quiet, over headaches from my power bill

    @billy5688@billy56884 ай бұрын
  • I absolutely love the collaboration with all the other great KZhead content creators! It's great to see everyone support each other, including the content creators! Another great video and I hope to see more little colabs like this!

    @F0zix@F0zix4 ай бұрын
  • I think most of your audience watches your channel, just because you do those builds. Love your videos, keep the high efficiency low power home servers coming!

    @user-qr1dv6ev1y@user-qr1dv6ev1y3 ай бұрын
  • Now that's the way to defend practical, high efficiency, low-power consumption, home lab construction. I appreciate your videos for exactly that reason. Kudos on the Tech-tube celebrity comment voice-overs as well. Happy holidays and i look forward to more of your great content in 2024!

    @deechvogt1589@deechvogt15894 ай бұрын
  • I have always found the topic of networking/servers to be daunting, this video really inspired me to start learning about it to be honest.

    @milky_dromeda@milky_dromeda4 ай бұрын
  • I really like your presentations, even though I'm just starting to learn about servers and NAS related tech. My only goal is to build & maintain my own Home Lab/VLAN/Server/NAS type of system to store security cam video, backups of my home theater library, some home automation and common office networking, all behind a VPN and firewall that can stop ads, tracking, data collection without any cloud services and a minimal amount of Wi-Fi as well as the amount of battery back-up needed to maintain this system for 10 hours of power failure. Needless to say, I have a lot to learn. Just getting to the point of knowing what features to incorporate took a while, but worth the effort to begin catching up with what's available.

    @MakeitZUPER@MakeitZUPER4 ай бұрын
  • I really like your builds. For me I've went with a used mini-pc from afb, when it was on sale. It's a bit overkill for the stuff I do, but it's always nice to have some spare performance. Most people also don't have the space for a rack etc.

    @SkyProgs@SkyProgs4 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for the clarification!

    @andrewmelean8259@andrewmelean82592 ай бұрын
  • Good and informative video. I like that you answered the comments with a sense of humor.

    @futurevision2317@futurevision23172 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for the video Wolfgang 👍

    @ryansteiger6960@ryansteiger69604 ай бұрын
  • Totally agree. A QNAP or Synology is all you really need for a home network.

    @angelh1743@angelh17434 ай бұрын
  • I 100% relate to the "I'm very petty and have a lot of free time on my hands" comment! I love the channel, perspective, and ideas, keep the great work going! Thank you!

    @CptBlackEye@CptBlackEye8 күн бұрын
  • can'T wait to see your next NAS+ build! ;)

    @Behnam_Moghaddam@Behnam_Moghaddam4 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for your work.

    @n3cotraf@n3cotraf4 ай бұрын
  • Well said. I agree. I have an old C2550 since 2015 and an N5105 for my server.

    @BabaDka@BabaDka4 ай бұрын
  • I really like your Videos Wolfgang. TNX a lot! As usual, great information.

    @TradersTradingEdge@TradersTradingEdge4 ай бұрын
  • As someone who is looking into the low end budget low energy area, chances are I need both a Server and a NAS, so the fact your videos offer the best of both is exactly what I want!

    @JetBlackRage@JetBlackRage4 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for sticking to basics, old tech, checking your actual CPU load & what works to get the job done. Plus, good to explain what a NAS is. If one is serious about it, yes, it's a different machine, just for handling storage that reconstructs data when drives fail & you replace them. The other stuff on too is extra services that are "nice". I'm looking to do a project for general home build that automatically backs up my devices with no fuss

    @FisherGrubb@FisherGrubb3 ай бұрын
  • luv it I always keep coming back to your channel

    @dexterman6361@dexterman63614 ай бұрын
  • Just watched your video, and I couldn't agree more. I enjoy watching your videos because they present content I might try at home for my network. In fact I just finished building a Node 304 with the motherboard you had in one of your videos and it is working awesome. Just trying to figure out how to get a hold of the case mode you made with the one huge front fan. I started watching the bigger network projects on some channels only because I like to see the tech involved but frankly I lost interest pretty quick because having a huge network cabinet in my home with thousands of dollars of equipment just doesn't make any sense. In fact I find a lot of these videos ridiculous, half the time the use case they present for all that equipment could easily be handled by a couple of small 'NAS' devices :)

    @johnmurgen7900@johnmurgen79004 ай бұрын
  • The intro is pure gold.

    @guy_autordie@guy_autordie4 ай бұрын
  • Dude, this 100%. The gate keeping is so strong in this hobby it surprised me a little. Same things with trying Linux, no matter what you do, someone will say that you're doing it wrong

    @paulzachary9812@paulzachary98124 ай бұрын
  • I like your videos, we need more like them. I need a home server that are power efficiency and quite. My home server is on my desk, running proxmox with vm.

    @mevludinnexus@mevludinnexus4 ай бұрын
  • What the internet lacks of is non-boasting low dollar practical computer/server builds that you present. I emphasise the word PRACTICAL, as most of us (unlike rich LTT) do need to consider the costs of setting up and running NAS/home servers. Well done Wolfgang! Keep making your videos!

    @mimeanalytics4331@mimeanalytics43314 ай бұрын
  • as an Software developer I feel a bit of anger when people forget what a term means and where it comes from. Server from to serve is a role/task description. I have refered to a lot as a server (because thats what they did) from phones streaming music to others in the room for sillent discos to rack mount pc's(more presise description of what people think of as a server)

    @kyuthefox@kyuthefox4 ай бұрын
  • Thanks a ton for all you share. Keep them vids rolling. Server = a role.

    @renovxperts@renovxperts4 ай бұрын
  • This is the kind of home server I'm interested in. Thank you

    @samuelitooooo@samuelitooooo3 ай бұрын
  • Du hast wirklich sehr schön ausgeteilt in diesem Video :)

    @techpchouse@techpchouse4 ай бұрын
  • IT professional for more than 4 decades here. Speaking in a general sense, the first servers in small and medium businesses usually ran on Novell Netware and, for the most part, served files. Maybe they had some print serving capability depending upon the use case, too. A few would also run some limited applications. They were servers, and were generally more expensive than you would run in a home at the time. Serving nothing but files has always been considered a "real server" in the enterprise environment. So the home server hardware gatekeepers know not of what they speak.

    @walterstarr1588@walterstarr15884 ай бұрын
  • It’s crazy that people even dare to call you untrustworthy … Everytime I watch a video from you, I enjoy how well researched, thought-through and well-argued the conent is. Thank you for all the inspiration, shared knowledge, fun and the work you put into this. Dont think about those who always find something to complain about. Keep doing your thing :)

    @petrol_brothers776@petrol_brothers7764 ай бұрын
  • I love this. Back in the 2000's i worked a lot with network administration. One place I worked ran with large Dell and Compaq servers costing thousands and thousands of dollars. What did all those servers do? They provided network drives to the company that owned it.... lots and lots and lots of harddrives attached and pretty much notning else. Would anyone say that those machines, running Windows NT and Windows 2000 Server weren't servers? Nope. A server is a computer or system that provides resources, data, services, or programs to other computers over a network.... and that's it. Great video!

    @Razumasu@Razumasu4 ай бұрын
  • I was running my home server on a Core 2 Quad for about two years, through 2021-2022, worked wonderfully. Others came to me with electricity usage concerns, so I got convinced into moving it all to a 2011 macbook with a dead GPU, no display, no CD drive, etc. That solution's been a bit more limited in capacity,moved from a 1tb drive to a 750 but it's worked and is still what I'm using today. I did recently pick up a complete 6700K and 32GB ram system for free, I plan on getting a NAS style enclosure to replace its case, filling it out with 2tb SSDs in a RAID5, and setting up my next server setup around that. To be honest, it's wildly overkill, a 6700K on a home server that mostly just runs a NextCloud instance, but I got it, I got nothing else for it, so to server use it goes.

    @kmemz@kmemz2 ай бұрын
  • Preach brother! I couldn't agree with you more. Times have changed.... some people and their terminology haven't quite kept the pace.

    @peterruppert7856@peterruppert78564 ай бұрын
  • Exactly. The hardware needed to do the job(s), low energy usage, and preferably a small form case. You got it!

    @walterpark8824@walterpark88244 ай бұрын
  • Awesome video! Keep them coming

    @badmorale582@badmorale5824 ай бұрын
  • I do love your server builds because they are madly efficient, and reasonable. I do use my tv server box which is a nas as well, but i see the appeal. I know i will build one one day and i want it to be cheap and efficient. I only need media storage and access, and some light services running, honestly a raspberry pi should be enough for me, so a pentium is already overkill it seems. Can't wait to see the next one !

    @Spyke_misc@Spyke_misc4 ай бұрын
  • My server is old ITX board with AMD E350 paired with 4GB of RAM and 8TB HDD. I'm running 7 docker containers on it and OMV bare metal. I haven't had any single problem in past few years and it serves me just fine. People usually go way overkill on their servers, I've ran RPi 4 few years ago as NAS with few docker containers and it worked just fine. It was cheap and barely used any power. Your builds are way more interesting to me than LTT or any other KZheadrs builds because people usually don't care about power efficiency or noise, they just build normal PC and stick bunch of HDDs in it without optimizing anything.

    @setecastronomy_hc@setecastronomy_hc4 ай бұрын
  • Totally agree...continue building what you have been building!

    @RichardTalcott@RichardTalcott4 ай бұрын
  • Я тоже сначала использовал дома сервер на 2х 2643v3, затем перешел на 10600к с урезанным теплопакетом в 30вт в пике. А сейчас вообще перешел на g5420 в сервере на даче и для моих нужд он идеально подходит

    @FixDevice@FixDevice4 ай бұрын
  • I think most people don't understand how much hardware has improved and how little the requirements of most software increased at thr same time. (Not including gaming) You can easily see that by comparing an MS Office install with a Game. MS office used to be larger than most games, or at least the same size. Now it is not even in the region of most new high end games.

    @moritzm.3671@moritzm.36714 ай бұрын
    • Btw. The same is true for laptops. Most people can now do most tasks (including video editing and Gaming) on a laptop.

      @moritzm.3671@moritzm.36714 ай бұрын
  • Dude... you had me at 'very petty and happen to have a lot of time on my hands'. Oh, and nice work getting Raid Owl to read at least one of the comments!!

    @cameronfrye5514@cameronfrye55144 ай бұрын
  • Great video, Wolfgang. I've been using an old HP Z600 workstation with dual Xeons as a home server running Proxmox. I genuinely love it, but it's completely unnecessary for most people, not to mention that it's a complete power hog (so I have to be quite conservative with how long I keep it running), so I'm looking at "downgrading" and building something that's more power efficient.

    @gnulectures@gnulectures4 ай бұрын
  • Excellent channel and great view point expressed here.

    @DavidGillooly@DavidGillooly4 ай бұрын
  • I ran a two home servers in Atom 330 motherboards for many years. The cost of the board with CPU and memory was much cheaper than the power use over a year of the dual Athlon motherboards I'd been given with a 48U rack I have in my office. They rain email, DNS, DHCP, internal chat and network monitoring as well as file sharing. Definitely servers. I often use retired desktop motherboards for my home servers as I don't need the grunt and power use of enterprise kit, and swapping out a failed part is quick, easy and cheap, particularly with Linux being happy to cope with the chipset changes. Even spun up a Linux install on an old Digital Pentium desktop back in the day to run Bind to cover for an RS6000 while waiting for the hardware to be repaired. Nobody noticed a thing.

    @PaulTansom@PaulTansom4 ай бұрын
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