There are a lot of reasons not to give them your money. They’re assholes to the maker community and they openly talk shit on a lot of their customer base. That’s beside the point, though, really.

It’s just not a spectacular option for hosting. In order to get a Rpi competitive with even the shittiest laptop from 7 years ago, you’re going to end up spending more than you would spend on a decent laptop from 7 years ago.

If it is a computer that turns on, it will likely function orders of magnitude better than an Rpi and won’t bind you to ARM architecture. My entire hosting setup was pulled out of a recycling pile for free. Install ubuntu/ubuntu server and enjoy yourself.

If you intend on spending any amount of money on this hobby, I cannot express enough how much I recommend against any of that money going toward a Raspberry Pi.

EDIT: A lot of you seem to be reading this as “Raspberry Pis are all nonfunctional” and getting mad about it. Don’t do that.

Edit 2: Good to see that all the stupid parts of reddit made it here

  • @[email protected]
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    322 years ago

    That is a whole lot of text just to say “Rpi bad” – its (still) the best single board computer for both performance and low power draw.

    • Brad GanleyOP
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      -182 years ago

      Is it the best one? That’s a big claim with no evidence.

      • @[email protected]
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        42 years ago

        There is no evidence for the same reason that I don’t need to explain why “fire is hot” – everyone who used the internet for at least 5 minutes in their entire lifespan knows this.

        • Brad GanleyOP
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          -132 years ago

          As an engineer who has worked for a LONG time with both SBCs and other computers, that’s a stupid thing to say

  • @[email protected]
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    72 years ago

    I’ve been testing some alternative SBCs like the OrangePi 5.

    Currently mine is a fallback DNS server and reverse proxy for my network, trying to come up with some other uses for it.

    They’re still low power ARM boxes, but they’re much cheaper than the RPi is at the moment.

    • @[email protected]
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      62 years ago

      They also have really bad support. And i’m not talking about holding your hand. I’m talking about hardware support.

    • @[email protected]
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      2 years ago

      Nice.

      I’ve had acceptable outcomes on LibreComputer boxes running Armbian. I’ve had terrible luck with anything except the core Armbian image, but for a lot of stuff, Armbian on Libre gets the job done during the chip shortage.

    • @[email protected]
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      32 years ago

      I almost ordered an Orange Pi5 yesterday. I realized I still have a couple RPi4s around, and I’d just be spending money on something I really don’t need. I’m waiting for a good excuse though, the reviews looked pretty solid. What are your impressions?

      • @[email protected]
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        32 years ago

        Doesn’t come with a power adapter and has weird power requirements. Wouldn’t power up at all with a standard 5V 1A wall plug, needed 5V 4A.

        Apart from that it’s been perfectly fine. I wish other OS than the armbian they provide supported this CPU.

  • @[email protected]
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    2 years ago

    There’s plenty of stuff that maybe I don’t want to self host on the same device and that I would rather host on RPI due to power consumption for example. Not all about money and recycling old computers, but regarding ecology also spending less energy it’s extremely important. Imagine a full desktop computer just to host pihole + pivpn. Sorry but your statement is pretty bias.

    • Brad GanleyOP
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      -42 years ago

      Have you ever actually measured the power consumption of a computer?

        • Brad GanleyOP
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          -102 years ago

          I’ll trust my years of experience, you seem pretty biased.

          • @[email protected]
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            32 years ago

            Actually I run both rpi4, zeros, optiplex and home made servers. But do your own tests. Make sure you document them and send them to me to prove that your correct, because by your logic, with no proof, you look like the bias one having a rant on a dam hobby ;)

            • Brad GanleyOP
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              -92 years ago

              Also, does having even more servers than you’ve listed running within 3 feet of me count as a source the same way it does for you?

              • @[email protected]
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                02 years ago

                Good to know. After that answer I am know 100% that you are an expert. Maybe post your CV afterwards, “honey”

                • Brad GanleyOP
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                  -72 years ago

                  I don’t really care what you believe or if you live the rest of your life being wrong. I made a post about considering other hardware and the people who are sexually attracted to RPi are not stoked about it

                • Brad GanleyOP
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                  -62 years ago

                  I remember being 12, too. Have fun it doesn’t last long

  • @[email protected]
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    232 years ago

    There are a lot of reasons not to give them your money. They’re assholes to the maker community and they openly talk shit on a lot of their customer base.

    Citation needed, Pi’s are just a single member of the broader SBC market. They are great for a lot of projects, especially for beginners who are their primary market, or those unfamiliar with Linux systems.

    It’s just not a spectacular option for hosting. In order to get a Rpi competitive with even the shittiest laptop from 7 years ago, you’re going to end up spending more than you would spend on a decent laptop from 7 years ago.

    Citation needed, currently for what I use my Pi’s for, they are massive overkill. A laptop has WAY more breakable, and less repairable parts. A pi is a SBC, nothing I don’t need. I don’t want a screen, I don’t want a keyboard, I don’t want an ancient battery that is probably bloated from being plugged in all the time, and I absolutely do not want a fan. Honestly the Pi zero is overkill for most of my stuff, I just do actually want a wired network port. Your measure of “competitive” is extremely flawed, because you assume the only thing a Pi is useful for is it’s raw number crunching power when that’s not at all what they are marketed towards. In all honesty, I’d love to see a laptop that was even 50% as good a a Pi, but for that weight and size you’re looking almost entirely at used phones, whose OS is significantly more locked down. Can’t exactly run Docker on Android, let alone dealing with running servers over wifi.

    If it is a computer that turns on, it will likely function orders of magnitude better than an Rpi and won’t bind you to ARM architecture. My entire hosting setup was pulled out of a recycling pile for free. Install ubuntu/ubuntu server and enjoy yourself.

    How could I mount a laptop to my garage door for presence detection of which car is coming and going? Would be kind of an eyesore wouldn’t you think, without even mentioning the weight problems. Laptops are massive compared to a Pi. For your point on ARM specifically, that’s a feature my friend. Alternative cpu architectures are pretty interesting, and I personally have been an avid RISC-V follower for years now, and am absolutely thrilled to bits waiting for a standardized RV solution like the Pi. How lucky of you to just be given everything for free, thanks for taking e-waste out of the landfills for a little while I guess. Most of us have to buy the products we use, maybe getting something from a friend once in a while.

    If you intend on spending any amount of money on this hobby, I cannot express enough how much I recommend against any of that money going toward a Raspberry Pi.

    What do you recommend instead?

    • Brad GanleyOP
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      2 years ago

      Sounds like arduinos and a laptop is what you want

      edit: sorry in advance for how unenthusiastic this response is. I’m real fucking tired of talking about this to a crowd of people who have already decided I could never be correct

      • @[email protected]
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        122 years ago

        Arduinos can’t really handle video encoding and presence detection on board. A laptop is extreme overkill, as I said in my post. Don’t want a battery, screen, keyboard, hinges, and fans are a deal breaker. Old laptops are bulky, heavy, have proprietary power bricks that are never cross compatible with each other. A laptop and a SBC are just totally different markets, and are used for totally different things.

        • @[email protected]
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          12 years ago

          For that workload, I’d use an ip can and offload the smarts to something like frigate running alongside the rest of my home automation stack. For smaller workloads it’s esp8266/32 all day long. Again, offloading the hard work to my home automation stack rubbing on decent hardware.

  • @[email protected]
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    412 years ago

    Can you expand on some of this?

    I haven’t really heard much regarding them being bad to their community/customer base, though I haven’t bought in a few years.

    In regards to cost/performance, what are you meaning you’d need to spend extra on to match that of an old laptop or recycled machine?

    • @[email protected]
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      142 years ago

      if you don’t want to be replacing sd cards

      The truth hurts, but this is the truth. Clawing at those little shits is the most annoying thing ever.

    • @[email protected]
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      2 years ago

      Not OP, but my Lenovo tiny computer on ebay is about $60 and will run circles around a raspberry pi

      Power usage isn’t too much higher, it’s upgradeable, and it’s x86-64 architecture so more things are supported.

      My tiny has an i7 and was a bit more expensive, but it’s a powerful little guy. I added more ram for a total of 32, and it does better than my “old” server (technically from same era).

      Can’t speak for the other stuff.

      • Sweetroll
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        62 years ago

        Do you run Windows on yours, or have you installed a different OS to run things?

        • @[email protected]
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          52 years ago

          Not op but I have 3 tiny PCs and I run Linux on them. But then I don’t run windows at all because it honestly sucks.

            • @[email protected]
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              42 years ago

              for what…? Stealing your data, sending telemetry about how your kids play minecraft, serving up Ad’s in your start menu, forcing updates that reset your configured preference, overriding group policies, abusive licensing, trying to shove bing and edge down your throat?

              • @[email protected]
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                22 years ago

                No just overall experience. Everything runs better on Windows really. Anonymous usage shit doesn’t matter to me really. As for anything I need to do Windows just does it better, I don’t run into weird driver issues or update problems that cause things to crash miserably or lock me out of my boot sector with obscure errors I have to spend forever troubleshooting through a rabbit hole of forum posts and obscure nonsense. All the software I would ever need to use works fine including all the obscure stuff I have to use for work that I otherwise spend forever troubleshooting in arch, Ubuntu, mint, etc. Using wine, proton, or etc. It just works. I could plug any USB device in on Windows and get a little pop-up that says “you dude your shits ready to roll” and it’s good. I used Linux for 15 years or so on and off and I was vehemently pro Linux like you are but dude it really does suck. Only way it works is if someone develops a distro with exacting, specific hardware in mind and tests it for a good couple years then releases it for others to use with the exact same hardware. Cases like Chromebooks, steam decks, Enterprise mainframes and servers. Yeah, that’s fine, someone is putting in the time and effort to build specifically for this things. As for everything else, if you want shit to work and get your day to day work done as a grown up, not a great situation unless you somehow hit some sweetspot of hardware config that will supported. Otherwise most of your computing time is gonna be spent getting your computer actually functional

                • @[email protected]
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                  22 years ago

                  The primary reason I have to fiddle with things in linux is because I want to do things that really are not possible in windows. I still have to use Windows for work because I am tied to specific software and in these cases I have no other choice.

                  But I find I spend equal time fixing and supporting my windows machine as I do with linux. There are lots of valid complaints about linux and I have my own, the biggest is on Manjaro which I run for my daily it frequently has expired keys and updates just stop running correctly and the error messages are just bad.

                  I personally hit the tipping point with windows on windows 10. Initially I loved it, and it seemed like a good upgrade from windows 7 which I had previously been using. But then Microsoft started forcing anti user features. I decided that rather than have to spend time after EVERY FORCED update hunting down the settings and registry hacks that had been changed again to what I expressly wanted.

                  I personally see the value of Windows, but I would just disagree with it having a better experience. The experience is equally frustrating and the biggest thing holding people back is that they are used to the frustrations and dont think of them as being as significant as they are.

      • manitcor
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        112 years ago

        facts, at this point you are paying for size, gpio and the fact that its a form factor with industrial grade options easily available. not really as useful for a hobbyist at the price though.

          • @[email protected]
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            22 years ago

            Any ESP32 you would recommend with easy wired networking (like DHCP client), easy language (python, node, c#. Tbh these are just the ones I know), easy IDE, and a bunch of libraries (like OSC, WebSockets, mqtt, rabbitmq, as well as stuff for various GPIO stuff)?

            I’ve gone down a street of node-red on a raspberry pi, and I find it really easy to make complex things.
            But 90% of my stuff is node->JS function->node. And I feel like I could do better!

      • @[email protected]
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        32 years ago

        Same with the HP elite desks, and don’t forget you can get off lease Chromebooks with much better specs than pi for ~$60 as well

        • @[email protected]
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          32 years ago

          The EliteDesks are nice, but beware top venting if you’re planning to stack them vertically

          • @[email protected]
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            22 years ago

            Yeah if someone is planning to stack I would definitely suggest they make sure they aren’t buying the top venting models

        • @[email protected]
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          22 years ago

          I have a few PIs already and like them, but if I was doing a system today I’d probably go with the HP Elite Desk (800 Gen 2 or 3 perhaps), sourced as an ex-gov unit which can be had very cheap. The PIs have gotten expensive enough that they’re basically price equivalent once you add a case and possibly an SSD to it, at least locally. Have used those HP systems at work and they’re decent little boxes.

          The caveat is that I’m not too fussed if I’m drawing extra power, as long as the performance justifies it. If power was a primary concern then the PI may still win out. I’m also not going to need to consider size in anything I do, and then then the micro PC form factors aren’t massive.

          • @[email protected]
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            22 years ago

            Yeah, choosing between the two definitely isn’t a black and white situation. I still use my pi’s for a lot of things, and power is definitely a factor. Neatness is also a factor as well. Having a project where you need an SATA or m.2 drive especially as buying an enclosed case alone for that is gonna cost $40 at least and you have to give up a USB 3 port to do so. Again though not every project needs that and a lot of projects like a pihole or emulation box can function just fine with SD.

    • Brad GanleyOP
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      -12 years ago

      If you don’t want to be replacing sdcards every two weeks, you’ll need to add a hard drive with an enclosure which will also need power. You’ll also need an upgraded power supply for the pi. To deal with any sort of scale, you’ll need more than one in a swarm. If you don’t want them just out in the open air, you’ll either need to coat them or put them in cases. It just all adds up to way more than a $5 ebay laptop with a broken screen that has 20x the performance.

      • @[email protected]
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        82 years ago

        I have an SSD connected to mine which doesn’t need external power and runs fine off the “official” power adapter. The case I have isn’t the greatest (two pieces of acrylic and some stand-offs lol), but it costed 50p and gets the job done.

        As for scale, you’re beyond a Pi at that point.

        • @[email protected]
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          I had the same, but it got corrupted eventually. It seemed it was working fine, but it was impossible to complete smartctl test. I believe that rpi cant handle peak power draw every SSD. That SSD was running fine for 3-4 months and before that I had one running for 2-3 years. I feel like its kinda random and depends on your luck

  • @[email protected]
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    532 years ago

    Euuhh what? I used to use an old pc but found out I could save about NZ$100 per year on power by switching to an RPi4. It hosts about 15 things, like sonarr, radarr, home assistant, pi hole, nzbget, photoview, Frigate, and backups, without any issues. Yes it’s not super power full but it’s perfect for me.

    • @[email protected]
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      32 years ago

      You cant beat rpi with power usage, but PC can draw <10W on idle. Well my server is more like 20-25W, but thats 25ish € a year here. Rpi would be 5-10 € a year. I pay around 0.12 €/kwh in Croatia. If you can save 100 nz$ you have hungry PC or your electricity is not cheap at all :)

    • @[email protected]
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      62 years ago

      You cant beat rpi with power usage, but PC can draw <10W on idle. Well my server is more like 20-25W, but thats 25ish € a year here. Rpi would be 5-10 € a year. I pay around 0.12 €/kwh in Croatia

      • @[email protected]
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        52 years ago

        Just standard raspberry headless os. Everything running in containers except pi hole.

        I’ve installed a heat sink and a fan, triggered at 70c. Also have set some cpu docker limits on eg frigate and nzbget to ensure it doesn’t take the rest down.

        But it performs surprisingly well. Load is 1 on average, goes up a bit when eg motion is detected, an nzb is parred/extracted, or photoview is indexing stuff.

        Also recently added Paperless. Set everything to minimum, eg one document at a time.

      • redcalcium
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        42 years ago

        Pretty sure you can use the standard raspberry pi os and run all those apps with docker or k3s

  • @[email protected]
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    112 years ago

    I’ll need to get some links on any of this. But I generally use VM’s or VPS my self.

    • TheWoozy
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      -92 years ago

      Links? OP is sharing their experience and expressing an opinion. What do you want links for?

      • @[email protected]
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        52 years ago

        Expression of an opinion is starting a sentence with “I think that x…”

        OP wasn’t expressing an opinion but stating items that I wanted to get examples of.

  • @[email protected]M
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    122 years ago

    The moderator team will take this as a learning opportunity. We don’t have any rules for this community specific to rudeness or insults. This post was fine as an opinion piece until Edit 2. For this reason, I’m locking the post. Additionally, we’ll be updated the community rules on the Sidebar shortly.

  • Rick
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    212 years ago

    I use mine for my pihole and have been pretty happy. $40 bucks, tiny footprint and power consumption. I have a 3 from 2018. I get where your coming from but gonna need some sauce for your claims.

  • @[email protected]
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    1102 years ago

    You seem to have conveniently left out power consumption.

    I agree they are very pricey these days. Are there any competitiors that offer cheap low-power consumption computers?

    • @[email protected]
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      52 years ago

      You seem to have conveniently left out power consumption.

      Exactly. Thus, even a rpi 4 w/ 2 GiB is serviceable enough as is if you know what you are doing.

    • Brad GanleyOP
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      -52 years ago

      You’d probably be shocked at how close a 65w supply charging a laptop battery at trickle voltages and a 2A 5v power supply maxed out 24/7 can come to each other

      • @[email protected]
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        102 years ago

        An RPi doesn’t max out a 2A 5V power supply unless its under heavy load. Idle is closer to half an amp.

        • Brad GanleyOP
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          -232 years ago

          If you’re hosting a server, you’re not going to get much idle time.

          • @[email protected]
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            2 years ago

            What about a web server or a file server? Both are very much on-demand, so they’re chock full of idle time. Even NextCloud has a ton of idle time.

            Edit: As an aside, I love your profile pic, it’s a cool wizard :)

            • Brad GanleyOP
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              32 years ago

              Thank you! A tiktok follower who is a tattoo artist surprised me with a drawing of me with some toads and I’ve loved it more with each passing day

          • @[email protected]
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            172 years ago

            Heavily depends on the server, a game server sure, for almost anything else you’re probably doing it wrong.

      • @[email protected]
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        2 years ago

        Do you have some source for that?

        I can’t see an old laptop running 24/7 as being close to a raspberry pi performing the same tasks.

    • @[email protected]
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      292 years ago

      It will not be that great like on Raspberry Pi, but Mini PC are also very low on energy. For example,. Wyse 5070 with J5005 idles around 3-5 W, which is really great. i had HP 800 Mini G3 that idled ~7-8W. Mini PCs are more powerful, expandable and can use normal SSD Drive. For selfhosting they are better, but in some places Raspberry Pi (or alternative like Orange Pi) will be better, especially when you need something small and really low power

      • @[email protected]
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        2 years ago

        I never heard of the orange pi!

        Some of the models are very cheap. Have you tried them? If they are as reliable, I might get myself one for a couple of projects.

        • @[email protected]
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          62 years ago

          I tried one ~5-10 years ago and the idea was good but it didn’t have nearly the level of support that Raspis have.

            • @[email protected]
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              42 years ago

              A little bit of both IIRC.

              It used a different chipset than the raspberry so it needed a tweaked version of Raspbian to run but the drivers weren’t great and the repos were missing a lot of stuff/outdated.

              • @[email protected]
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                22 years ago

                Ah thanks!

                Yeah that’s gonna be tricky for me then… I really don’t like to deal with driver headaches.

          • @[email protected]
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            22 years ago

            I’ve definitely also had the experience of dodgy hardware support (in Armbian, which is all volunteer) with weird Chinese SBCs.

        • @[email protected]
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          112 years ago

          Yes. I have Orange Pi Zero 2 with 1 GB of RAM running Ubuntu. This is actually very powerful machine, more powerful than my Raspberry Pi 3B+. i bought it for about 180 polish zloty (around 40 euros). I use it for printing server with Ghostscript printer app installed via Snap. I also tried Wireguard and MongoDB - everything works fine. it works really well, but it sits around 50 C on CPU, so it can get hot.

        • @[email protected]
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          2 years ago

          I got an 1 gig Orange pi zero 2 with a 2 port USB expansion board. I got it from ali express with a 32gigabyte micro SD card, USB to USBC charging cable for like $40.

          I 3d printed a case for it. Provisioned it with a heatsink, fan, 18W USB power supply, and a UPS.

          I use it as an octoprint server, the extra USB ports go to a webcam and a fan if i feel like it. It’s been reliable but I’ve only had it a month. Transferring jobs is nearly instant plugged into gigabit ethernet. Transfer is via API key not web interface. Seems to do alright in the CPU department. It has to parse some of the larger jobs for a minute.

          Prints perfectly. Only had one resent packet USB packet so far. After it prints rendering out 1080P time-lapses was slow. It would hit like 70% cpu usage and take hours. Rendering out 1080P octolapses with fewer frames and less movement would hit 98% cpu use but be done very fast - like 10 min.

          They just announced an orange pi zero 3 with a similar form factor (but not exactly the same) and larger faster memory.

      • @[email protected]
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        32 years ago

        Oh never looked into those, thanks!

        I wanted to get something to use as a NAS server and/or a pi-hole.

        • @[email protected]
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          42 years ago

          Sure, yw :) There are also NAS cases for some of the SBCs, but I guess you can also go cheaper without a dedicated case and go with some icybox which allows you to connect some disks (jbod or RAID) via USB 3. So many possibilities!

    • Cosmic Frog
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      202 years ago

      Yeah, power consumption is never talked about enough when talking about that type of hardware. I do have an old PC I could use as a server, but I don’t need more heating at home. Mini-PCs are cool, but how cool are they?

      But anyway, I haven’t been able to buy a RPi at decent price in years, so 🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @[email protected]
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      232 years ago

      I use a thin client (Futro S740 with J4125 CPU). Far more powerful than a PI4, same-ish power consumption, I don’t have a device that can do sub-10W measurements, but there are measurements from other users.

      Refurbished thin clients are absolutely amazing for consumption-conscious home servers, I paid <$40 for the device and <$100 for all my hardware combined (2 SSDs, 8 GB RAM, m2 adapter).

      Pi’s are amazing, but unless you need the GPIOs or the size, there are better options for servers.

  • @[email protected]
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    82 years ago

    If anyone is looking for ARM SBC alternatives since Raspberry Pis are so expensive:

    1. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B078RT6H8X/
    2. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B074P6BNGZ/
    3. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BFVFF3FV/

    Do note that if you are doing any IOT/anything with the pin inputs/outputs of an SBC, you’re going to have to match the pins/change some config in your code to make it work with these boards. It shouldn’t be too hard, it’s an SBC after all, but compatibility issues arise all the same.

    Cheers

  • @[email protected]
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    92 years ago

    I do agree that stuff like the RPi 4 is in a weird spot where it’s too weak for a lot of things but also too expensive for the light stuff. The biggest gripes I have are the SD cards which makes data intensive tasks impossible/expensive and overall makes it so you need to think about not causing to much writing. That and how hard they are to place. Large enough to be ugly and in the way but small so they’re awkward to find a good spot for.

    However I think the RPi zeroes are amazing for building small but intelligent sensors like picking up when a specific bluetooth device enters a room or a small microphone to create a relay point for a voice assistant. They’re super easy to program since they still run basic Linux compared to other alternatives that are more efficient sure and some even cheaper but require you to access them via COM or learn much more machine close coding. Which puts up a massive hurdle for prototyping and playing around with the possibilities.

    As for using old laptops that a big ehhh for me. Find yourself a used NUC instead. Much better form factor and the same power or even better. Though if they dont need to be visible then I really do prefer a small desktop, then it can have decent fans and hold hard drives. Everybody needs a NAS right? And building one yourself is easy and they make for excellent home servers too.

    • TheWoozy
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      32 years ago

      Used NUCs don’t have built-in UPSs, like used laptops do.

      • @[email protected]
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        22 years ago

        Battery is the first thing to give and a 7 year old one as the post is on about is unlikely to have much use left as a UPS. But sure, in theory that’s nice but if you need UPS then buy a dedicated solution, since that’s actually reliable. If you don’t really need it then don’t buy laptops for that reason.

    • Lka1988
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      22 years ago

      As for using old laptops that a big ehhh for me. Find yourself a used NUC instead.

      Yes, but that costs money and I already have the laptop in my possession. Which is the majority reason why old laptops are used for this kind of thing.

      • @[email protected]
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        2 years ago

        Sure but that is a different premise than the post isn’t it? They explicitly talk about buying an old laptop.

    • Brad GanleyOP
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      2 years ago

      Because you’re looking? I guess I don’t understand the question.

      edit: lol wtf happened

  • generalEdo
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    12 years ago

    I will argue from experience that Homeassistant runs pretty damn good on a pi using an SSD. They have an image specifically for HA as well.