Here is the thing, I have 4 RPi’s of different generations (all the way from Zero W to 4B 4GB) that I use to host services at home for personal use.

Lately, I have realized I am running out of RAM to host more services, not to mention not enough switch ports to connect to.

Now I know the obvious solution is to get a more powerful setup (maybe a thin client) but electricity isn’t cheap and I am not particularly in the best shape financially speaking to shell out $300+ on a decent client to host my services.

Any suggestions?

    • Possibly linux@lemmy.zip
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      9 months ago

      Hardware transcoding is highly efficient. The downside is sometimes it introduces artifacting in low resolution live TV.

    • maryjayjay@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      With hardware support enabled it can live transcode four 1080p streams, which my old NUC (5th Gen i3) could also do. The GPU on the NUC could not handle 4k, so it would fall back to using the CPU which would not keep up with a live stream.

      The N100 can transcode one 4k HDR with Atmos 7.1 audio and stream in real time. It was just a test, there was a bit of a stutter as it settled in, but I think that might be due to the drive enclosure being connected via USB, so it was storage bandwidth rather than CPU/GPU. The USB ports on the computer are 3.2 gen 2, but the enclosure is only 3.0 at 5Gb/s.

    • MangoPenguin@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      9 months ago

      With Intel QSV enabled it should be able to transcode like 4-6 1080p streams IIRC. Quicksync is very impressive hardware acceleration.

    • skittlebrau@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      It’s a 6W TDP CPU, but not 6W for power consumption.

      At full tilt it’ll be about 25-30W, but typically it’s around 10W for me.