what would you do with an old dell server?
from TwoBeeSan@lemmy.world to selfhosted@lemmy.world on 11 Nov 03:11
https://lemmy.world/post/38634187

My dumbass was gonna strip it for parts.

Curious what you industrious folks would do with it?

Similar except 4x2 TB www.ebay.com/itm/316549741700

Inb4 put Linux on it

Edit: well it booted earlier and now it doesn’t. 😵

THE DUST

#selfhosted

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Sanctus@anarchist.nexus on 11 Nov 03:16 next collapse

Run some jellyfin on it just for your house

j4yc33@piefed.social on 11 Nov 03:17 next collapse

>.>

inb4 put Linux on it…

Proxmox it and then install a bunch of Linux containers on it!

Bishma@discuss.tchncs.de on 11 Nov 03:23 collapse

Like most of the best things in life, Proxmox is built from Debian.

[deleted] on 11 Nov 03:28 next collapse
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j4yc33@piefed.social on 11 Nov 03:29 collapse

I have a funny screenshot about this! I didn’t know Fedora and OpenSUSE were Debian based! /s

<img alt="image" src="https://media.piefed.social/posts/Fz/XG/FzXGbXZCLXX7WGe.png">

Bishma@discuss.tchncs.de on 11 Nov 03:43 next collapse

I can’t respect that list anyway. Where is Hanna Montana Linux?!

A_norny_mousse@feddit.org on 11 Nov 04:52 next collapse

Debian is missing!

lka1988@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 11 Nov 18:04 collapse

Everybody knows Debian is actually Gentoo.

ShellMonkey@piefed.socdojo.com on 11 Nov 03:26 next collapse

I have one around that same class that is running Security Onion, because why not record and analyze all the things.

solrize@lemmy.ml on 11 Nov 03:26 next collapse

Depends on the specs. If it’s really old the power consumption will cost more than you’d spend on newer hardware. I have such a box sitting at home doing nothing. It’s cheaper to rent a hetzner dedi.

Godort@lemmy.ca on 11 Nov 03:33 next collapse

For real. I got my hands on a fully loaded PowerEdge 2900 around 2017 and it added almost $100 to my monthly power bill.

thebardingreen@lemmy.starlightkel.xyz on 12 Nov 01:01 collapse

But did your winter heating bill go down? Asking for a friend.

CmdrShepard49@sh.itjust.works on 11 Nov 03:38 collapse

Same. For most people in our space, a Dell Optiplex micro is more than enough horsepower (except few expansion ports). There’s no reason to be running a legacy server consuming 2.5kW just to host some movies or store your camera footage.

TwoBeeSan@lemmy.world on 11 Nov 03:46 collapse

My thoughts too. I already have the Dell optiplex with external hard drive bays.

Overkill is overkill especially when it has a cost for power and your room sounds like a fucking aircraft hangar

frongt@lemmy.zip on 11 Nov 03:30 next collapse

Looks like a rebranded R340? Nice! That’s a good deal.

I’d keep it and run proxmox, but that’s because that’s why I like to run for my workloads. Depends on your needs. If your electricity is free, you could mine crypto or whatever.

Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world on 11 Nov 06:38 collapse

…who has free electricity, and how do I get in on that?

kossa@feddit.org on 11 Nov 07:00 collapse

Apparenthy Australians three hours at noon www.abc.net.au/news/2025-11-03/…/105965472

Or if you have one of those fancy new “bill by the minute according to exchange prices” contract in the EU, you might even receive money for using electricity at certain times 😅. But those times are (yet) far in between, so blasting the sweet free energy on crypto is not really viable.

floofloof@lemmy.ca on 11 Nov 03:47 next collapse

I’d use a Kill-a-Watt or similar to check how much power it uses, before deciding whether it’s worth installing anything on it. Also check how much noise it makes, unless you have a separate room for servers. Enterprise servers aren’t always a good fit for home use.

logicbomb@lemmy.world on 11 Nov 04:14 next collapse

what would you do with an old dell server?

I thought this post was going to be a sea shanty.

The_Helmet_Stays_On@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 11 Nov 04:50 next collapse

Ohhhhhhhh what would you with an old dell server

Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world on 11 Nov 06:36 collapse

What would you doooOOOOOooooo… for a Klondike bar with an old dell server?

yakko@feddit.uk on 11 Nov 06:51 collapse

File a ticket with the online comments

File a ticket with the online comments

A_norny_mousse@feddit.org on 11 Nov 04:50 next collapse

…early in the morning

thebardingreen@lemmy.starlightkel.xyz on 12 Nov 00:59 next collapse

Add a GPU and mine some crypto, add a GPU and mine some crypto, add a GPU and mine some crypto, earlie in the mornin’!

TwoBeeSan@lemmy.world on 12 Nov 01:03 collapse

This has made it worth it already

possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip on 11 Nov 04:38 next collapse

Strip is down and clean it thoroughly

Once you have done that do an inventory of what it is. If it is more than 8 years old recycle it

root@lemmy.world on 11 Nov 05:08 next collapse

Sell to pay my electricity bill

electric_nan@lemmy.ml on 11 Nov 05:20 next collapse

Drop it on a cop from a high window.

Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world on 11 Nov 06:34 collapse

Or ICE agent. Dealers choice.

lka1988@sh.itjust.works on 11 Nov 07:00 next collapse

So, uh, exactly how “old” is that server? Because, if I understood it correctly, it should be based on 8th gen Intel, which makes this a solid piece of equipment in any homelab (provided you can deal with the noise and power draw).

ClickyMcTicker@hachyderm.io on 11 Nov 07:10 next collapse

@TwoBeeSan Recycle it unless you have excess free electricity.

irmadlad@lemmy.world on 11 Nov 14:48 next collapse

I agree with the advice of finding out how much electricity it will consume. When you step to this level, power consumption becomes a reality. Just looking at specs and doing some swag, it’s probably going to cost anywhere from $15 to $25 +/- USD monthly. A $500 entry fee seems a little rich for my blood. Second, you’re going to have to put that thing in a closet. Those fans are loud. Other than that, rock on bro! Git sum!

greybeard@feddit.online on 11 Nov 23:34 collapse

Another worth while consideration is heat generation. That takes more power to offset that too. During the winter maybe it wont be so bad, but it can be brutal in the summer.

irmadlad@lemmy.world on 12 Nov 00:15 collapse

Another worth while consideration is heat generation.

Indeed. I put my rack in the closet. Cut in a 500 cfm inline exhaust fan to the attic. Then I wired it to a thermostat. That way it’s not constantly sucking 500 cfm of AC into the attic in the summer and heat in the winter. Then sound bat and insulation to keep the drone of the fans to zero with the door closed. Seems to work nicely. But yeah, when you step up to enterprise equipment and legacy at that, associated cost are worth considering.

derry@midwest.social on 11 Nov 16:37 next collapse

Windows 95, directly on the Internet just for the hell of it

GreenKnight23@lemmy.world on 11 Nov 23:34 next collapse

I had a r610 running last year. two 1kw PSUs running 24/7. when I migrated to new hardware my monthly electrical bill dropped around $75 a month.

it sits in my rack as a shitty reminder that commercial hardware is cheap for a reason.

Treczoks@lemmy.world on 12 Nov 00:03 collapse

I’ve got a DELL server that I used as home server, but it was too loud. But it worked well, even at an advanced age. I moved the disks to a normal desktop machine (not DELL) that is much, much quieter.