• Ulrich
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    5 days ago

    A RPi is going to be smaller, quieter, and 10x more energy efficient though…

    • @Hozerkiller@lemmy.ca
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      55 days ago

      There are probably a dozen things you can do to save energy on orders of magnitude higher than using a pi.

      • Ulrich
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        115 days ago

        Then do them. It’s still not going to decrease the energy use of your server.

          • @MangoCats@feddit.it
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            25 days ago

            At the HVAC control level it would be a Pico - for the development / maintenance time efficiency: I know how the tools work, I know the community support is there, the hardware is easy to find and available relatively reliably, although ESPHome on the ESP micro-controllers is pretty good too.

  • @Octagon9561@lemmy.ml
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    235 days ago

    It’s a good idea until you consider the fact that a Raspberry Pi will be astronomically more power efficient.

    • @ikidd@lemmy.world
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      55 days ago

      If you think in flops per watt, maybe a little bit, but not a lot. Do you have one or two good procs for almost free, or half a dozen new sbcs at $100 each? Takes a while to save back that amount in power.

      • @MangoCats@feddit.it
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        75 days ago

        My question is usually not how many flops, but how quickly and reliably those watts can give me just a few flops on demand.

  • @Korhaka@sopuli.xyz
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    6 days ago

    Power consumption is a massive reason to really not do that. Its cheap for a reason, its takes a shitload of power to be shit and you will pay more in energy than you save in hardware unless its only powered on for short periods of time - a server typically isn’t.

    This is actually something that applies to cheap products too. Was in Asda a little while ago and saw 2 LED bulbs with the same lumen rating. Cheaper one used 3w more and you only saved £1. Running it for 8 hours a day for a year would cost double that saving in electricity. For a server you are looking at almost £2 per watt each year. Does that ewaste look so good to you now?

    Some things are absolutely worth getting second hand, but you really should be careful considering the power cost as well.

    Quick edit: If you don’t need it running 24/7, consider something like AWS too. I love selfhosting but if its not running much it might be cheaper to not bother buying hardware.

    • @pineapple@lemmy.ml
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      176 days ago

      This is generally not true. If you are using your laptop as a home server chances are it’s going to be idling 99% of the time and laptops are generally pretty good in terms of idle power draw if you manage to disable the screen (or just disconnect it, take it off and find a way to repurpose it)

      And in terms of environmental impact saving a laptop from landfill is definitely better since the majority of a computers impact is from the co2 emmissions from the manufacturing process. And this isn’t taking into account the likely ethical considerations such as supporting terrible mining practices for resources like cobalt.

      • @catty@lemmy.world
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        35 days ago

        This is generally not true. A small server running on an old pi when idling will have hardly any draw. It will cost literally pennies to run for the whole year.

        • @pineapple@lemmy.ml
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          5 days ago

          A rasperry pi idles at about 2 watts vs a laptop that idles at about 4 watts. At $0.30/kwh (a very high price for electricity) you would save 5 dollars per year on electricity. This laptop trades blows with the rasperry pi and costs half the price (55$ aud vs over 200$ aud for a brand new pi 5) Even this second hand one costs 110$ aud which is twice the cost. With that cost of electricity it would take 11 years in order to break even. And that’s only if you consider monetary cost and not environmental cost.

    • @HugeNerd@lemmy.ca
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      176 days ago

      Are you living on a space station? What is this shitload of power? A whole 60 watts? Are you rationing AA batteries to run your household?

      What is it with the bullshit fanciful rationalizations people come up with to consume consume consume?

      • @squaresinger@lemmy.world
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        86 days ago

        And that’s 60W while charging. In idle with the screen off, low end laptops often consume as little as 2-3W. Which is not far off from a pi.

        • @HugeNerd@lemmy.ca
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          45 days ago

          But I want to be cool and awesome! I want to constantly re-learn how to do basic things over and over because TECHNOLOGY!!!

          https://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=23718473&cid=65450499

          And I think China is evil and dumb… but I click “add to cart” on aliexpress in my sleep!

          But I am deeply worried about totally renewable energy consumption by buying an endless stream of disposable baubles!

          (Read above in some kind of sarcastic tone)

      • Frater Mus
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        45 days ago

        Are you living on a space station? What is this shitload of power?

        Some of us live off-grid and make every Watt-hour we consume. So it may be that one man’s fanciful bullshit is another man’s daily life. For context, this is my 2,461st day offgrid.

        A whole 60 watts?

        Over the last 30 days I’ve averaged 2.01kWh/day, or an average constant consumption of 84w. All in. And that’s on the high end for folks in similar use cases. In this scenario adding in another 60w would be significant (ie, impossible for my rig during winter months).

        As Sesame Street taught showed us it’s a matter of perspective.


        • @Thebigguy@lemmy.ml
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          5 days ago

          Um if you’re living with computers are you really „off the grid“ computers require the grid to be manufactured. If you’re off the grid because you worry about the way the worlds going and you think you’ll need to be off the grid to survive I wouldn’t make having access to computers part of the plan.

      • @Korhaka@sopuli.xyz
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        25 days ago

        60w is like £120 a year, these costs add up to the point that low spec servers pretty much always cost more in energy than hardware. Of course it also depends on where you live and your energy rates.

        You could buy a 20 year old server that is going to use 800w, or you could buy a mini PC that is probably more powerful and uses like 10-20w.

        Then again, I used to live somewhere that energy was included in the rent so short of starting a bitcoin farm usage wouldn’t really get noticed too much. In that case it would make sense to just go cheap hardware.

        • @HugeNerd@lemmy.ca
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          25 days ago

          I’m glad I don’t have these addictions people seem to have. “I need a computer to measure how much water my toilet uses!” “I need a computer in my refrigerator!” etc

          We’ve passed the useful stage of computing, we are now in the “personal issues” phase.

    • @Allero@lemmy.today
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      206 days ago

      Aren’t laptops typically very energy efficient? Low consumption converts to high battery life, which is a priority for laptop hardware.

      Some of them consume less than 10W.

    • @JuxtaposedJaguar@lemmy.ml
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      146 days ago

      There’s lots of ways to make existing hardware more efficient at the cost of performance. Under-volting the CPU and RAM (or just putting them in “efficiency” mode) can probably save more electricity than you lose in generational improvements. Considering how much more powerful PCs are compared to SBCs, you’d probably still have better performance than an SBC. Also, a more powerful CPU that takes double the power but as a result can idle for more than 50% of the time would be more efficient than a less powerful CPU never idling.

      There’s a lot of other variables (like idle power draw, efficiency at various power levels, idle latency, etc), but in general I think your statement would be inaccurate at least 60% of the time.

      • @Korhaka@sopuli.xyz
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        56 days ago

        Oh I am not saying specifically get a raspberry pi, personally looking at a bee-link N150 mini PC. It isn’t even that much more expensive than the 16GB raspberry pi and as its x86 I can just run normal debian installs in proxmox.

    • @MangoCats@feddit.it
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      65 days ago

      A good “rule of thumb” to remember: if your electricity rates average (somewhere near) $0.11/kWh you can take the average power draw of a device in watts and that is equal to what it will cost to run that device 24-7 for 365 days.

      So, if that cheap PC draws 50W more than an alternate solution, it’s costing you $50 more per year to use it.

      Some tasks are beyond any RasPi, but it’s well worth evaluating if something like an N100 fanless mini-PC can handle it instead of loading up some Core i7 rig that’s going to cost more to run in the first year than the N100 costs to buy.

    • @Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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      35 days ago

      Power consumption is a massive reason to really not do that. Its cheap for a reason, its takes a shitload of power to be shit and you will pay more in energy than you save in hardware unless its only powered on for short periods of time

      Ewaste computers actually tend to be on par if not better than an RPi in power consumption these days. It might feel like a RPi should be more efficient given the size and USB power connector, but modern Pis consume a solid 10-20w while in use which is more or similar to most miniPCs (they idle at single digit watts now and can “race to sleep” more effectively than a Pi) while costing about the same and the Pi is far less upgradeable

    • dil
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      16 days ago

      lowendtalk, hella cheap vps with plenty of resources for most self hosted apps, the issue with it is usually storage space but there are ways around that connecting your drives from elsewhere

      • dil
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        16 days ago

        Warning tho, hella shills too but you could literally make a post asking if certain companies on the site that have active threads are scams and get valid responses that don’t get removed or anything so thats nice, like half of the ones I looked at were giving less resources than they claimed

    • @bizarroland@lemmy.world
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      847 days ago

      If you have the lid closed, you’re looking at 3 to 15 watts to have a laptop running in the background doing some basic server shit.

      Maybe a little more under high load, but those are going to be intermittent and not constant.

      I’m just saying it’s not that much more electricity usage, and the recycling more than offsets the CO2.

      • @MoogleMaestro@lemmy.zip
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        637 days ago

        If you have the lid closed, you’re looking at 3 to 15 watts to have a laptop running in the background doing some basic server shit.

        Not all laptops make effective use of power with the lid closed, sadly. Not saying this as a correction, but for others to know that they need to make sure these settings are available in the bios of the system they are buying.

      • @RvTV95XBeo@sh.itjust.works
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        307 days ago

        Laptop performance when closed is quite variable, but depending on where you live, each 10W of idle consumption 24/7/365 could cost you somewhere around $20/yr (assumes @$0.20/kWh, YMMV). This isn’t overwhelming on it’s own, but it is “cost difference between a junked laptop and a Raspberry Pi” kinda money.

        • JustEnoughDucks
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          66 days ago

          And you are often paying 140-200 for a pi nowadays to make it have the same usability as a laptop (pi, power supply, sata hat, data drive because SD cards simply fail after a while under server IO) while you can get cheap used laptops for 0-100.

          So unless you are running it for more than half a decade (which rarely happens with selfhosters for a main server), you are probably spending more in total on the pi.

          • @RvTV95XBeo@sh.itjust.works
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            26 days ago

            I think SD card failure rates are way overblown if you’re buying from reputable manufacturers (Sandisk, Samsung). I’m sure they do occasionally fail, but I’ve never experienced one.

            You’re right, for really intensive tasks the costs can climb, but I see people asking for ideas for what to do with a junk laptop and the top suggestion is always something like pi-hole or a bookmark manager that could run on a potato.

            Like with most things in life, it depends.

            • Tim_Bisley
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              15 days ago

              I have a high fail rate with Samsung SD cards. Oddly the cheap-o no name ones haven’t failed yet.

            • I'm Hiding 🇦🇺
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              36 days ago

              I used to think so too, but my pi-hole just died the other week after four years of uptime. Couldn’t work it out, finally pulled the SD card out to reinstall the OS and found my laptop wouldn’t recognise it.

              Made me glad I don’t run my mailserver on a Pi anymore!

              • @Diurnambule@jlai.lu
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                15 days ago

                I join you, I used to change SD card and USB disk every 1-2 year. I bought a nas 3 year ago didn’t need to change disk yet.

      • @BananaTrifleViolin@lemmy.world
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        7 days ago

        Laptops are not generally designed to run like that with a closed lid. Heat dissipation is designed around the idea the laptop is open and some of it is through the keyboard surface. The lid closed would change that.

        Systems can of course be setup to power off the display but for server/service uses open laptops may not be efficient space wise.

        Having said that if the scenario is low power use the heat dissipation may not be a major issue. But if there is an unremovable battery i’d still be concerned about heat dissipation with the lid closed and even just the battery itself regardless of heat dissipiation.

      • irotsoma
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        25 days ago

        Not quite. Unless the system has pretty advanced power management and is using very recent technology with high density, it’s unlikely that an x64 chipset will use less power than a comparably powered arm64 chipset. Not just the processor, but the smaller board is actually a power saver and allows it to generate less heat meaning both less power wasted and dissipated as heat as well as less power needed for fans to properly dissipate the heat. I’ve never seen a laptop use 3W at idle when considering the whole device, maybe just the CPU, but not if you include the rest of the components like RAM and disks and power supply. And especially true in a laptop that is old enough that it’s being recycled. Heck, the power supply and charger alone might be using 3W at idle with full battery.

        With a raspberry pi 4, the typical power usage for the 2GB RAM model is 5W under load for the whole device and about half that for idle. Add a couple of watts for the extra memory and wider bus on the 8GB model and other things can add to that, but that’s mostly accurate. The pi 5 is a little more and the 3 is a little less. Of course, the efficiency of the laptop at full load might end up being better than a comparable number of raspberry pis it would take to do the same amount if work, but comparing a single pi or any other reputable arm-based, single board computer to a single laptop at idle is always going to be that way.

      • @LaLuzDelSol@lemmy.world
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        26 days ago

        Not so sure about the last part. It takes ehhh about 3kg of c02 to produce 1 Watt for a year. Carbon footprint to build a laptop is about 200kg or so, but you’re not offsetting one of those you’re offsetting the raspberry PI you WOULD have bought which is just a small fraction of that. After a year or 2 you’ve almost certainly burned through your c02 savings if it’s on all the time.

  • @j4yt33@feddit.org
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    877 days ago

    Get them from where? I always read about these basically-free computers but have yet to see one

        • Tippon
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          467 days ago

          ‘Gaming laptop, only used occasionally. Been sitting around for a while because my kid’s got a new hobby. £1,200 no offers. I know what I’ve got’

          The pictured laptop has a Centrino sticker on it and looks like it’s been used to dig a garden

        • @not_amm@lemmy.ml
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          106 days ago

          Same here in México, a lot of people think their dual core Intel from 2011 (and even older than that) is still worth more than +$100USD. Even worse, companies usually want to resell devices to recover some of the cost, so even that option is kind of expensive. I’m waiting for some friends that can buy company devices for cheap so they can resell them to me for cheap too lol

        • Yep. My FB Marketplace is 75% crackheads flogging off stuff they stole from shops/actual tax payers/their neighbours/ the train, 10% delusional idiots with shit that isn’t worth half of their asking price, 10% scammers, and 5% not shit listings.

        • @Diurnambule@jlai.lu
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          26 days ago

          Pawn shop I would say but they are expensive too… Their is some carricatibe structure which refurbish computers and sell them gor dirt cheap. 20 Buck per tower. But that crapy computers.

        • @kent_eh@lemmy.ca
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          76 days ago

          Haven’t heard of kjiji, I’ll have to check it out.

          It’s essentially Craigslist, but in Canada.

          Craigslist doesn’t really have a user base here.

        • @LaLuzDelSol@lemmy.world
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          36 days ago

          You’re missing out, Facebook marketplace is THE place to buy local secondhand goods for dirt cheap without getting scammed. You do need an account but you don’t need to install anything, and the payments are not done through FB

    • @Macaroni_ninja@lemmy.world
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      137 days ago

      I know its not the most ideal place, but FB marketplace where I live has lots of old PCs/Laptops for under 50 eur. I would probably start there personally.

      • Sam, The Man
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        26 days ago

        I go to Ebay and sort by distance. It’s like Craigslist but they send it to you!

    • I do e-scooter mechanical stuff, I always have a bid war with the local franchisee scooter shop nearby fighting for the scooters. I know its them, so I try to raise the bids for them as much as possible to fuck them around.

    • @Mongostein@lemmy.ca
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      5 days ago

      We have bins around our city for people to drop electronics off for recycling. I’ve taken a few laptops from there. You’re not supposed to, but ¯\_(ツ)_/¯.

      One I gave to my buddy who needed something just for emails and web browsing and whatnot, one is running a server, and a couple more went back in to the bin because they were actually broken, but I took the hard drives for the server machine. I have one on a self ready in case the server machine dies so I haven’t gone looking for any new ones in a while.

    • @Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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      15 days ago

      eBay, work, friends/family, friendly ask of your work’s IT person, or just call up the local recycling/ecycling company and ask

      • @GnuLinuxDude@lemmy.ml
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        107 days ago

        What kind of place do you go to to find these things? Sometimes I get really lucky (see my post history about my wonderful new printer), but if I could increase my odds that would be cool.

          • @LaLuzDelSol@lemmy.world
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            36 days ago

            Back when I lived in a (quite nice) apartment building I was constantly surprised at the things people threw out. Perfectly good furniture but also stuff like perfectly functional printers, artwork, computer cases…

            • @Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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              15 days ago

              If you go near college housing there’s usually a given day of the year (either moving day or an official cleanup day) when tons of people put out stuff they don’t want to bother with keeping/moving. It’s Hippie Christmas baby!

        • I think 5W probably can’t be achieved, maybe with chromebook-like hardware, but I guess GPIO could be solved with a USB accessory

          in my opinion the bigger problem is the fire hazard of an unsupervised charger. I have seen enough that runs super hot, and even if it doesn’t, I just can’t trust them.

        • @stray@pawb.social
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          56 days ago

          I’m in an apartment building, so I just browse the one here whenever I take the trash out. I don’t think anyone has noticed, or they’ve elected to mind their own business if they have.

          There’s so much stuff that could still be used that it honestly isn’t funny, and that’s just in my own bin. How much more is being wasted across the country? But at least it’s in the recycling and not the trash, so that’s something, I guess.

    • @czardestructo@lemmy.world
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      57 days ago

      No gpio but old centrino laptops make excellent low power servers. My primary server was a first gen centrino from 2011 up until recently and I think it only used 12w idle after putting a SSD in there. Had it’s own UPS built in.

    • @martinb@lemmy.sdf.org
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      46 days ago

      There are usb gpio devices which can fulfill the connectivity bit. Pretty sure you are sol with the 5w though 😊

      • elmicha
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        56 days ago

        The Raspberry Pi Zero in USB gadget mode can be used for GPIO. If you don’t want to setup gadget mode, get Pi Zero W.

      • @Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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        15 days ago

        About to be? The bottom has been falling out for desktops and laptops on processors not on Microsoft’s supported list for the last year or more. I’ve seen roughly the same system go from ~$200+ down to under $100 on the last year based on eBay pricing alone

  • Chaotic Entropy
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    115 days ago

    Yeah… I’m not going to stick a clunky old laptop on top of my bookshelf and have it run 24/7 as my PiHole. My Pi Zero 2 W is far more appropriate.

    • @MangoCats@feddit.it
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      35 days ago

      I agree that the Zero is up to the task, but I prefer a wired connection for my home DNS/DHCP server and if I understand correctly the Pi5 has better wired ethernet than its predecessors… Yeah, utilization is laughable, but there’s something to be said for reduced lag time too:

      Hostname:	pihole
      CPU:	0.2% on 4 cores running 318 processes (0.3% used by FTL)
      RAM:	25.9% of 2.0 GB is used (7.4% used by FTL)
      Swap:	35.9% of 512.0 MB is used
      Kernel:	Linux pihole 6.12.25+rpt-rpi-2712 #1 SMP PREEMPT Debian 1:6.12.25-1+rpt1 (2025-04-30) aarch64
      Uptime:	a month (running since Sunday, May 18th 2025, 17:54:59
      
      • Chaotic Entropy
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        15 days ago

        I have never felt the need to have a wired connection for my DNS/DHCP, since such a trivial amount of data exchanges hands. The quality of the wired connection if it had one would similarly have negligible impact, surely.

        • @MangoCats@feddit.it
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          25 days ago

          For me it’s not about the bandwidth, it’s about the lag and reliability. I have had strong WiFi connections flake out a lot more than wired connections.

          Also, I just prefer to not have 100+ WiFi devices kicking around my network when more than half of them could be wired, or on another protocol like Zigbee.

          • Chaotic Entropy
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            15 days ago

            I guess I am pretty far from saturating my WiFi in any way, the removal of cables with little to no impact on connectivity was far more of a priority for me. I have never noticed a WiFi related outage or performance loss.

            • @MangoCats@feddit.it
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              15 days ago

              I will say this: we had a big lightning strike a few years back and it conducted into the house via the internet cable, then spread via the ethernet cables taking out everything that was wired (over $7K in damage) - devices connected only by power and WiFi were mostly spared.

            • @MangoCats@feddit.it
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              15 days ago

              My WiFi routers have historically struggled a bit, I’ve got a decent one now, but even it is slow to manage the DHCP lists for fixed assignments by MAC address.

      • Chaotic Entropy
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        55 days ago

        I should have rebuilt an old coffee maker in to a Pi Hole instead. I’m such a rube.

  • irotsoma
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    95 days ago

    Only if you’re running it at full load all the time and comparing that to a comparable number of raspberry pis it would take to do the same amount of work. Also, only if you live in a cold climate and the heat generated is not a concern and power is supplied by a renewable source so power isn’t a concern.

  • Hyacin (He/Him)
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    6 days ago

    I mostly agree, and did the same with my second gen lab build - instead of shiny new NUCs like I had used round 1, I bought old off lease Dell Xeon boxes. SO MANY PROS -

    • Got them up to 14c/28t each
    • They can take GPUs and actually do heavy transcoding/ML work
    • They can take up to like, 128GB of memory, which is GREAT when they’re all hypervisors

    The downsides can’t be denied though -

    • Even without the GPUs and beefed up CPUs, they are power hogs - the CPU alone uses more than an ENTIRE NUC
    • They run HOT
    • They run LOUD

    The same holds true for off-lease SFF stuff, Lenovo and the likes …

    So while reuse/repurpose is absolutely of the utmost importance, no question - when it comes to technology and how quickly it advances and miniaturizes, a thorough and logical pros/cons list is often required.

    I’d add another option though - if you do need what a Pi brings to the table - do you really need a shiny new Pi 5? Is it possible a used Pi 3 or Pi 4 would do the trick, and check the reuse box?

    • @AndrasKrigare@beehaw.org
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      56 days ago

      The power aspect is a lot bigger of a factor than I would have thought. I had an old computer I was going to use as a server for Foundry that I could keep up all the time, but when I measured its wattage and did the math, it would cost me $20 a month to keep on. A pi costs like $2 to keep running, so it paid for itself pretty quick