Home Datacenter

According to an op-ed on Popular Mechanics everyone will have a home server in the future . I think I will put it in the garage next to my flying car.

From the article:

My point is that as processing power continues to get cheaper and more pervasive, you'll ultimately need a centralized server--that high-powered traffic cop--to coordinate the non-stop exchange of information between your new multitude of devices.

I have SSR and the AFC site (and mail server) running on a little mini-itx server in my basement. It is on my home private network. Couple of issues; one, it is a pain in the arse to administer. Hosting is cheap enough now that it is easier to pay them for it. Dedicated hosts also have better uptimes than residential connections (I have a plan that allows servers on ports such as 80 and 25). However I am in the process of migrating the applications on my home server to a dedicated hosting company so I can decommission the mini-itx box.

I see the point in the article, the main data-sharing issue we have is music. Probably in the future we will have issues with digital movie/tv show sharing. We kind of get around it by using the iPod to transfer data and music between floors, but it would be cool if our music and media was in a central location.

Permalink, Home Datacenter, May 2007, cam

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