ECC is a ‘good to have’, but isn’t critical unless your systems are.
Most of the higher costs that come with stuff advertised as “server hardware” come from the need to get 99.99% uptime instead of 99.9%, because that 0.09% represents millions of dollars, or even people’s safety. If you just want to store personal data and run some basic services like a media server or a personal email, then pretty much any hardware will work, just make sure to backup your data regularly in case something goes wrong with your disks.
abominable_panda@lemmy.world 6 days ago
Honestly depends on whats being served. As i say people can run servers on enterprise grade multi thousand £ systems or a £50 pi or mini pc.
Since you have a specific usage in mind, media server, you basically want hardware that will allow optimised performance so you can have a lag/ buffer free experience.
Say, hardware thats good for on the fly encoding/ decoding Lots of ram for multitasking. Lots of storage to store the media. Maybe gigabit network cards for multiuser streaming without bandwidth bottlenecks.
It really depends on the experience and chokepoints
ECC ram ill let someone more familiar answer but im leaning towards non critical and nice to have
BlameThePeacock@lemmy.ca 6 days ago
Power efficiency will also matter for a home server to some extent. You don’t want a 300 watt idle power draw 24/7 just to handle streaming a video for yourself once a day.
Most home devices won’t use that at idle, but older PC’s, or larger setups could.