Low power web/file server

Associate
Joined
26 Aug 2010
Posts
1,268
Location
West Yorkshire
I'm possibly looking to build a home server later on in the year, but power consumption is a big thing to consider rather than start cost, as i dont want the elecci bills to be too high :P so the server must be as low wattage as possible. I dont really care about streaming videos, although coming to think of it, there will be music and videos stored on it, so streaming may be necessary (wired to desktop pc's). I know that does mean that the power requirement will increase though, so multiple opinions for streaming and non streaming would be nice.
I would be using it to store all the data from installers, music, videos, documents etc.. for each of the home PC's as well as a web server that i can use to store files for FTP, host website/s from and access my documents remotely.

Can anyone give me a good starting point for where to start? Cost isn't a problem, and i can build computers fine. Should i use an Atom CPU for the lower TDP, or is there anything else more suited for this that still has as low as possibly TDP?
 
ooh. i was thinking of getting one of those as a local thing, but i just saw that is has 24/7 "cloud" (i hate using that word :P) so that is pretty cool! Cheers :D
What is the software customisation like on them?
 
The synology stuff is pretty good - qnap too if you're wanting a bit more

Not sure how customisable they are, most of these things run linux based systems and can be hacked to varying levels. But out the box they'll still do download management, web, ftp, file serving, media streaming etc etc.

Its probably because I spend my working life around real, serious servers, but I really cant be bothered with servers at home. 9 times out of 10, i seems that they're a waste of time and a nice small NAS box would do a better job while chewing less electricity
 
All the stuff it offers looks pretty cool, so i'll probably get one of them then. One last question; WD red or WD green? Red is apparently good for servers and RAID, but green is good for power and cheaper.
 
Back
Top Bottom