this post was submitted on 15 Mar 2026
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I've been interested in self hosting a small variety of services yet I'm so confused on where to start. What would you guys recommend for a server machine?

My main uses (and some of the services I think are appropriate for the use case) are:

  • 1tb photo, video storage, push/pull (immich)
  • 512gb total shared between downloaded music storage (navidrome) and pdf/ebook storage (calibre)—all pull only
  • 1tb movies/tv storage on a media server (jellyfin)
  • 512gb storage for random junk or whatever, plus a file transfer push/pull (syncthing..? or nextcloud?)
  • potential basic bio website hosting (near future)
  • potential email hosting (distant future)

anyways with that all said i have a few questions:

  • what server should i buy if i want to expand storage in the future? should i just build a pc with like 3x1tb storage, or 6x1tb storage w/ redundancy? totally confused about the concept of redundancy lol
  • any thoughts on the services im suggesting? especially for file transfer
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[–] ShortN0te@lemmy.ml 1 points 21 hours ago (1 children)

I think you are missing the point how easy is to fuck things up in a console

No i think you are. Why should a beginner ever even touch the CLI? You can also SSH into the synology and fuck things up.

Using a 'friendly environment' like synology is not gurantee to not fuck things up.

Installing truenas when having no idea about almost anything is cumbersome, dealing with the millions options (some of them incompatible between them) is frustrating, cryptic error codes are discouraging....

What millions of options? You select a drive, and set a password and your done? 1 Set fewer then on synology.

You brought up TrueNas. TrueNas for example also gives you safe boundaries and suggestions how to set up things. Same as synology. There is literally also a setup wizard for backups.

AND AGAIN just because you follow the synology wizards does not mean your data is safe either. You always can fuck things up if you want to.

[–] thelittleblackbird@lemmy.world 1 points 17 hours ago (1 children)

Oh I see, could you please point to that system that

  • it is free and not tie to any vendor
  • easy to use to the point that my grandma could use it
  • properly tested by an active q group
  • with safe boundaries
  • production ready
  • total flexibility
  • with a proper wizard / gui that is self explanatory, robust enough to make sure you don't select contradicting options.

If such system exist perhaps I move my homelab, who knows...

[–] ShortN0te@lemmy.ml 1 points 17 hours ago

Thats exactly my point. Both are not. But you keep claiming synology is compared to others.