Good news is that it’s slated to go stable some time this year iirc.
Good news is that it’s slated to go stable some time this year iirc.
Probably one of the higher end models?
To be honest, I’ll be forever dubious of new products that seem to be in every other YouTube video. I returned this one after a day or two of troubleshooting. It also didn’t support openwrt if I recall correctly.
Thanks, this has been added to unraids community app store BTW so hopefully you get a good uptick in users from there.
I’d stay away from that particular one. We ui was slow af and whenever wireguard connected it crawled to a stop.
Immich but it has a lot of breaking changes, good news is that going stable is on their road map for this year. They also joined FUTO.
As an alternative, Unraid. While it’s paid, it strips away a lot of the hassle you mentioned in your post. Has a built in shop where you just click, set up ports/shares and docker containers just spin up for you.
While I’m not a huge fan of their recent subscription model change, I do love their OS (I got I’m still grandfathered into the pre-existing perpetual license.
I wonder if something like hoarder might suit your needs and you can filter purchased based on tags
Well that kinda sucks hopefully you had time to replace/repair without data loss.
Thanks for the info. How long did the failing drives last and how was the replacement process (warranty not the nas replacement).
Also these were from gohardrives right?
For 1k you can build a beast.
Just throwing out an option if you aren’t aware, gohardrives on ebay and on their site sell used Hdds. 10Tb for $80. The catch is they’ve been used in data centers for 5 years. The company will guarantee the drives for an addition 5 years and it could save you a lot of money depending on how much you want to risk it. I went with 3, one being a parity drive in case other goes bad.
I use it to manage my subdomains, something like notes.mywebsite.com would point at my trillium instance while photos.mywebsite.com would point at my my immich container it has more uses but that’s my extent. I just have an instance of a cloud flare dns updater keeping my domain in sync with my ip so I don’t have to do that manually when it changes.
So in my scenario cloud flare is just part of my setup.
I wish I could’ve like next cloud more, but it seemed bloated as all hell and was slow regardless of what machine I tried running it on :(. I might give it another go one day.
If it’s a static site, you can host that anywhere for free on the big cloud providers, aws has s3 storage, Microsoft has blobs, github has pages, all which can be configured to run a site well under the paid tiers.
Trillium although I wish it has multiple users on the same instance, other than that it’s amazing and suits my needs.
I like plex better but damn is it bloated, had to take a almost an hour digging through settings to turn all those plex features off. Now it feels more back to basics.
Also of note, truenas uses kubernetes, I’d say 90%+ of companies I’ve worked at, k8s is overkill for their user base. In a home apps setting it’s ridiculous to think you will ever need something like that.
Depends on how much you want to spend on your own setup. Unraid, while paid, is brain dead easy.
Next cloud isn’t basic or at least it’s not written in a way that feels basic, you need pretty decent specs to run that and it may be overkill for a lot of people
Make sure you’re straighting them out before hand with the tip of a screwdriver makes it easier. Also look for rj45 connectors with a load bar, makes it a lot easier since you can feed them one at a time and make sure they are aligned properly, often they also come with pass through connectors and you should be able to do that in no time.
If you’re hosting plex or jellyfin I’d recommend an old Intel processor with quicksync. I paid like 200 for my pc on ebay gutted it and put it in a bigger case for more hard drives. Runs 4k videos like a champ with no GPU installed.