I am not looking to onboard thousands of users or host large communities, just my own and some family and close friends’ accounts. I don’t currently have a scalable homeserver setup (just a local Home Assistant instance on a Pi) and don’t have the space to put an old desktop running Proxmox on a cable.

I was browsing single-board computers and the Pine64 (2GB RAM) looks like a good deal. It seems more powerful than similarly priced Raspberry Pis (3B 1GB). Is it good for running a small Lemmy instance on?

EDIT: Thanks for the advice all, just bought an 8th gen i3 NUC (4 vCPU, 8GB RAM) to play around with Proxmox and VMs. Going to start off with migrating Home Assistant and then set up a Lemmy instance, and perhaps a static website too.

  • dan@upvote.au
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    10
    ·
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    For little computers like the Pi and its clones, I’d recommend using a SATA SSD via USB rather than an SD card, unless your use case has very few writes. I’d recommend this cable: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00XLAZODE/. It’s one of the ones that’s well supported by the Pi, and is what I use.

    Edit: I recommended a SATA SSD rather than NVMe because you won’t really notice a major difference over USB, and some NVMe drives pull more power than the Pi’s USB ports can handle (SATA uses quite a bit less power).

    • F04118F@feddit.nlOP
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      1 year ago

      Thanks, this is what I am using now for Home Assistant, but overall it’s a bit expensive for the power you get with a Pi4.

      • dan@upvote.au
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        2
        ·
        1 year ago

        At least you can reuse the SSD for something else if you ever stop using the Pi. They make great portable drives (but you’d definitely want a case for that)

        I was doing the same (running Home Assistant on the Pi) but these days I’m running Home Assistant on a HP ProDesk small form factor PC, mainly because I also wanted to run Blue Iris. The Pi is only my DNS server at the moment.