this post was submitted on 22 Nov 2023
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Homelab

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I know this topic has been done ad nauseam but I'm stuck in a decision loop that looks something like this...

"...OK screw it, I'm going to stop talking about it just get a [non-enterprise/non-rack] Synology/QNAP NAS. I rent an apartment and they have a much smaller footprint and low power draw out of the box. Damn, it really costs that much for 4 bays with entry level hardware? NIC and RAM upgrade costs how much??? What if Synology abandons that model? Where's the fun in this solution anyway..."

"...OK I'm going to look at going DIY instead. It's more interesting, more customisable, virtually unlimited support, can be cheaper. Man that case is big and ugly... hey that ITX case looks alright. Wow consumer ITX boards are expensive, rather limited, and look like they will suck power too. Woah OK enterprise ITX mainboards are not in my budget. Hmm that aliexpress NAS board looks alright, but could be a dice roll. Do I really have time for this anyway? OK screw it I'm getting a Synology..."

And so on... I get all the pro's and con's of each, and that's part of the issue!

Ultimately homelabbing is a hobby, and if I wasn't such a nerd I would have bought a turnkey solution already or just paid Big Tech for the solutions I require.

On the other hand, the storage is a critical part of the infrastructure and could suck the fun out of the hobby. Maybe it's best to pay for a solution created by people smarter than me (and paid for their time), so I can spend time on fun things that aren't mission critical.

So I want to hear from fellow nerds, which path did you chose and do you regret it?

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[–] krissovo@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

I picked DIY with regrets but it does not tell the full story, I guess I now need convenience for my own productivity. For me the cons outweigh the pro's of a diy system now I have spare money to invest in my lab. When I was broke it was great!

The con's are scraping a system together and spending precious hours over multiple days configuring it and then maintaining old kit, I am not a storage guy. Every configuration took a lot of time to research and then failures and restarting from scratch and then poor performance that needed investigating.

When I bought a Qnap solution, I was up and running in less than hour including adding the discs.