this post was submitted on 03 Oct 2025
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Selfhosted

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Hi there! This is a video that I made that I'm hoping can act as a beginner friendly entry level point to the world of self hosting and running a homelab. Just thought I'd share in case anyone is interested, and I hope it can be a resource to share with noobies. I don't claim to be an expert at all so I'd also love some feedback. Thanks!

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[–] Anomnomnomaly@lemmy.org 6 points 2 days ago

I pay for netflix... dumped prime a couple of years ago and got given disney+ for free for 12 months. I have my own server and am on version 3.2 of it after my first dedicated one I built in 2009. I've kinda had others before then, but it was an old PC I hooked up to my old CRT tv in about 2002 which struggled to play some mpeg2 content due to the weak single core CPU it had in it.

Now it's running on an AM4 setup with a Ryzen 5 5600G, so I can use the PCIE socket that used to have a GPU in it for a SATA expansion card, so that I can triple the number of HDD's it could hold. I'm slowly going through it once a year replacing the oldest 6TB drives (without about 80,000+hrs of uptime on them) with 14TB archive drives I rip out of seagate external drives. 4 more to go... to add to the 4 already done.

I think my first dedicated server had 3TB of storage (2x 1.5TB) and I still have one of those drives in an external drive that I use occasionally to fill with movies and shows when I go away and take one of my shield tv boxes with me... but mostly I take an external 500gb ssd as it doesn't require a power supply and I rarely have enough time to watch 1TB of movies and shows whilst away.

Over the last 15yrs, it's been rebuilt a few times and upgrade many... adding extra drives, swapping out CPU's and so on. 3 ground up builds with the last one being built in 2020... Normally when I build a new system for myself, the mediaserver gets upgraded with my old parts... Hence the last one being on windows 7 and an AMD FX 8350 with DDR3 ram until mid 2020.

Currently about 70TB capacity.

My next one will have a dedicated raid setup with parity... it's the one thing I've never been able to do with such a random collection of different size drives... hence normalizing them all to the same kind of 14TB ones.