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Cake day: July 4th, 2023

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  • Tons of good options in the used enterprise market. 3-5 years old, usually some paths for basic upgrades, as well as a flood of part availability from all the other similar systems being off boarded that were broken and not resellable. Laptops can be a bit roughed up, but full sized and sff desktops are usually in great condition.


  • This is the big reason. I keep the boxes to make future moves easy, learned the lesson the hard way.

    Other good reasons are the box keeps all the accessories in one place while saying what they are for (psu boxes, looking at you) or the box is great at storing that type of item, like the box my NAS drives came in, perfect foam insert for other drives







  • Apple really doesn’t offer me anything I want to do above and beyond what Android offers that makes the cost of transition worth it. I’ve been on Android for 13 years, I’m very used to it, know all the tricks. I like the level of control Android gives, I’ve loaded custom roms in the past and I side load apps now. I’ve also never had a (modern) Apple product and never had the need to set up any Apple accounts, so it’d be a pain starting completely fresh.










  • A lot of people start on used small form factor desktops like the ASUS PS52. Other common ones are the Lenovo M series tiny desktops, Dell Optiplex micro desktops or Intel NUCs. These can sometimes be found used for sub $100 a piece from businesses updating their fleets. They can struggle a bit doing stuff that needs some CPU grunt, like live plex transcoding, but are decent otherwise, especially considering the low power draw. You might want to consider spreading that software demand over two or three of them.



  • My understanding is that as the amount and speed of memory increases, the usefulness of ECC in detecting and preventing the types of errors that can cause a crash or corrupt a file goes up.

    But for home use it’s probably more useful to focus on storage redundancy and backups, or a UPS to keep things running during power blips/outages.