oh I see, this would be at a datacenter right? I realised I needed to install ubuntu because the server version is headless, and that's kinda pointless on a laptop.
For my needs, a local home server is fine. In fact, I want to just tinker around and actually download the node at least once first, try out lighting intergrations like BTCPay etc.
I'm also paying for the servers, two at the moment, so I really want to reduce my costs.
I currently have a relay running at a datacenter, using strfry. wss//nostr.sovrgn.co.za
Nope, I have mine running on a 2tb nuc at home.
you that NUC looks pretty decent! Umbrel has one too, and there's these "microserver" PCs which are also cool.
Tell me something, other than the HDD space, what is the real difference between a NUC and say a i3 laptop?
The laptop I have is 4gb, 1tb hdd(though I should swap it for a SSD) and then it has screen + peripherals.
I've been weighing up "headless" vs getting an enterprise second-hand laptop (something meaty) to run as a home server
If they have identical specs then nothing besides form factor. A pc is a pc. Probably cost of the screen increases the laptop cost, and maybe increases power draw, but idk.
I like headless because I can just access it from my laptop but you can do that with the laptop server too if you know the ip or setup port forwarding, but my router doesn't permit it.
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Have you bought hardware yet? I have a referral I can give you for a guy that is awesome and will help you set things up.
I'm in South Africa, so it may be harder to get. But we have datacenters here too. I haven't bought any hardware, nor do I intend to; it'd rather be as "light as possible" - if you know what I mean.
I'd rather run relays in datacenters and just keep "core" things on a "hot" laptop.
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