Thanks to Seagate for sponsoring this video!
Check out 12TB Seagate IronWolf NAS drives on Amazon: http://geni.us/gyac
Check out Synology NAS enclosures on Amazon: http://geni.us/hMvS2
Streaming from Netflix and YouTube is great, but setting up your own personal home media server has tons of benefits.
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Wait, who would want to watch indian cricket match?? That sh*t's boring af yo..
ReplyDeleteI just bought an external Seagate drive with 1TB of storage and stored my “legitimately downloaded movies, tv shows and documentaries” and use that instead of my built in hard drive.
ReplyDeletehow about gaming home servers?
ReplyDeletefun fact: you can do a pretty similar thing using windows sharing
ReplyDeleteLol, Tweakers and Uitzending Gemist.
ReplyDeletethis guy sounds like newbs from bff....smh
ReplyDeleteActually, I'm running a 6mbps down and 400kbps up
ReplyDeleteI do the same I rip all the Techquickie shows on my local drive so I sent have to watch the Commercials!
ReplyDeleteI just re-purposed an old HP Pavilion desktop we bought years and years ago. I installed Debian Linux, set up Plex, Minecraft, Rust and a private web service, upgraded it to 16 GB of RAM and upgraded the old dual core Athlon II X2 to a Phenom II X6 CPU so now it can handle multiple Plex streams while friends are playing on my Rust/Minecraft servers, all simultaneously with no issues. I moved the motherboard over into a newer case with better airflow, upgraded the power supply, and installed a 12TB Western Digital Gold drive for storing our media files.
ReplyDeleteThe whole thing is plugged into an UPS along with our router and the media converter owned by our ISP so even when the power flickers or goes out (which happens quite frequently in eastern Kentucky), the internet and everything stays running and I have time to notify people who are using the server at the time and perform a graceful shutdown instead of having everybody randomly disconnected in what could be precarious situations in Rust or Minecraft. The whole thing is managed over SSH so it just sits on a shelf I built for it back in a closet next to the UPS and router and the only time I ever have to touch it is to turn it back on after a power outage, or to clean out the dust once a month.
so link to the vid of the old computer to home server
ReplyDeleteAdderall & Cannabis?
ReplyDeletethe trouble with NAS is that the machines aren't always cheap.
ReplyDeleteSo not really how to setup a media server then
ReplyDeleteWhat is the difference between a home media server and a private mulimedia server?
ReplyDeleteSilky voice? Maybe sultry. .... Yum
ReplyDeleteToo much jargon do you have a more detailed video by chance
ReplyDeleteDeÄŸiÅŸik...
ReplyDeletewhat if i setup a home media server and suddenly the power in my city goes down?
ReplyDeletedo i lost all my data or something?
This is an overview, most peeps need an actual guide....
ReplyDeleteCan this work for a music studio like Sharing WAV and Midi File's
ReplyDeleteMy shitty internet literally put a glitch between "streaming" and "is fantastic".
ReplyDeleteToo bad there's no links to the other videos.
ReplyDeletenas mean people in arabic
ReplyDeleteWhat is the best NAS OS and how do I change from one OS to another without losing the data?
ReplyDeleteVCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR. VCR.
ReplyDeleteHow to make Nas for cheap.
ReplyDeleteBuy a raspberry pi
"power efficient" Do i look like i pay for the power here...
ReplyDeleteInstead of being called "how to set up a home media server" this should be called "why choose a home media server"...
ReplyDelete