WelcomeUser Guide
ToSPrivacyCanary
DonateBugsLicense

©2025 Poal.co

1.3K

Archive: https://archive.today/DH78u

From the post:

>Some people like their homelabs to be as big and fancy as possible, with racks of new or surplus server hardware sucking down power. [Hardware Haven] evidently has the opposite idea, given he just made a video about making the cheapest, smallest server possible: an Android phone. Sure, it’s not going to be streaming terabytes of data at multiple gigabytes per second, but that’s not everyone’s use case. Don’t forget, flagship phones had multiple cores and gigabytes of RAM a decade ago, so even an old and busted smartphone has more than enough power for something like Home Assistant, which is what gets installed in this video.

Archive: https://archive.today/DH78u From the post: >>Some people like their homelabs to be as big and fancy as possible, with racks of new or surplus server hardware sucking down power. [Hardware Haven] evidently has the opposite idea, given he just made a video about making the cheapest, smallest server possible: an Android phone. Sure, it’s not going to be streaming terabytes of data at multiple gigabytes per second, but that’s not everyone’s use case. Don’t forget, flagship phones had multiple cores and gigabytes of RAM a decade ago, so even an old and busted smartphone has more than enough power for something like Home Assistant, which is what gets installed in this video.
[–] 1 pt

At least he found some way to make use of an old phone. The cracked screen or weakened battery gets all of them. They become obsolete faster than laptops.