Gosh I remember when 500 gb hdds were the top tier "you're never going to fill all that" mode of storage. Now video games are fucking 100 gb themselves lol
Thank god for fitgirl repacks for a lot of reasons but especially thank god for helping me be able to fit more pirated games on my external storage lmao
Selective language packs are a godsend for saving more install space. I'm amazed that isn't used more frequently for actual legitimate versions of games.
I'm still having trouble realizing how much my 24TB NAS can hold. I literally filled it with every OK tv shows and movies I could think of, in 1080p (and with an homebrew netflix-like through jellyfin), every game I ever played or might want to play, hundreds of thousands of ebooks, and I still have like 40% free. x265 helped a lot, mind you.
Coming from a time in the 90s where my main hard drive was a 2.1GB one - and that felt like a lot at the time - it's insane, and amazing.
Energy I have no idea - but my guess based on the PSU is: very low. Total initial cost was a little above 1k€ though I did pick a very silent, high quality case as well as a very OK CPU (aiming with it both to perform transcoding with Jellyfish with no lags for sure and to add new services to the NAS - torrent downloading, hosting dedicated servers for games, etc.). This also includes a 256GB nvme drive for the OS (debian). I also wanted a small form factor so I had to get a good mini-ITX motherboard, and holy shit are those more expensive than their ATX counterparts (makes sense mind you: higher components density + lower demand), to the point where I slightly regretted it.
Anyway: price could go lower if you were willing to compromise on some of the above (just a larger ATX case and a slightly less beefy CPU would help by at least 200€; hunting for deals would allow you to shave much more if building it over weeks/months), though admittedly the main cost was still the four good quality 8TB drives IIRC, in RAID5 - with weekly emails reassuring me of the states of the array as well as an immediate alert in case of any suggestion of failure. Also added a SATA extension card and plan to add two more drives to it (the case supports it fine), raising the storage to either 32TB or 40TB depending on whether or not a spare is kept ready. Also pretty sure by removing some of the useless shit (SSD slots and the like) from that same case, at least one more drive could fit fine.
Mine is an old gaming pc bought off a friend (core i5 gen 4) with a bunch of drives in snapraid/mergerfs. That gets rid of the storage overhead and power consumption of real raid. The pc cost about $100 and the drives were a little over $80 apiece many years ago.
It costs about three dollars to run a gaming pc with ten disks 24/7 for a month. Once the video card came out it really wasn’t too consumptive. Even as a seed of its idling most of the time!
To help you save even more storage, look into CHDs or CSOs for compressing isos (PS1, PS2, PSP, Dreamcast) and RVZ for GameCube/Wii games. I'm not aware of PS3, Xbox/360 games, or any of the other Nintendo system's best compressed standards, so if you or anyone else reading are aware of them I'd love to know.
To fill up more storage, look into adding Audiobookshelf as a companion to your Jellyfin instance for audiobooks. Ever since setting up my own instance I've been listening to more and more audiobooks (theyre great for work/commutes for me).
I only play PC games, and I'm not that into audiobooks, but the ROM idea is a good one though, thank you; built a game console for my partner a few years back using Kodi and libretro (it's awesome, recommend both) and a discarded laptop with the screen removed, though I basically stopped at PS1 games IIRC. Mostly it was used for N64 games. Might want to make an updated version as a gift.
I also plan to keep a full backup of wikipedia and erowid, and possibly resume helping keep libgen alive with the spare storage I guess (you basically seed the torrents for it, helps it stay alive - takes a lot of storage though).
Gosh I remember when 500 gb hdds were the top tier "you're never going to fill all that" mode of storage. Now video games are fucking 100 gb themselves lol
Thank god for fitgirl repacks for a lot of reasons but especially thank god for helping me be able to fit more pirated games on my external storage lmao
Selective language packs are a godsend for saving more install space. I'm amazed that isn't used more frequently for actual legitimate versions of games.
Pls devs, compress your assets
I'm still having trouble realizing how much my 24TB NAS can hold. I literally filled it with every OK tv shows and movies I could think of, in 1080p (and with an homebrew netflix-like through jellyfin), every game I ever played or might want to play, hundreds of thousands of ebooks, and I still have like 40% free. x265 helped a lot, mind you.
Coming from a time in the 90s where my main hard drive was a 2.1GB one - and that felt like a lot at the time - it's insane, and amazing.
how much does that cost (both purchase price and monthly energy cost)?
Energy I have no idea - but my guess based on the PSU is: very low. Total initial cost was a little above 1k€ though I did pick a very silent, high quality case as well as a very OK CPU (aiming with it both to perform transcoding with Jellyfish with no lags for sure and to add new services to the NAS - torrent downloading, hosting dedicated servers for games, etc.). This also includes a 256GB nvme drive for the OS (debian). I also wanted a small form factor so I had to get a good mini-ITX motherboard, and holy shit are those more expensive than their ATX counterparts (makes sense mind you: higher components density + lower demand), to the point where I slightly regretted it.
Anyway: price could go lower if you were willing to compromise on some of the above (just a larger ATX case and a slightly less beefy CPU would help by at least 200€; hunting for deals would allow you to shave much more if building it over weeks/months), though admittedly the main cost was still the four good quality 8TB drives IIRC, in RAID5 - with weekly emails reassuring me of the states of the array as well as an immediate alert in case of any suggestion of failure. Also added a SATA extension card and plan to add two more drives to it (the case supports it fine), raising the storage to either 32TB or 40TB depending on whether or not a spare is kept ready. Also pretty sure by removing some of the useless shit (SSD slots and the like) from that same case, at least one more drive could fit fine.
Mine is an old gaming pc bought off a friend (core i5 gen 4) with a bunch of drives in snapraid/mergerfs. That gets rid of the storage overhead and power consumption of real raid. The pc cost about $100 and the drives were a little over $80 apiece many years ago.
It costs about three dollars to run a gaming pc with ten disks 24/7 for a month. Once the video card came out it really wasn’t too consumptive. Even as a seed of its idling most of the time!
To help you save even more storage, look into CHDs or CSOs for compressing isos (PS1, PS2, PSP, Dreamcast) and RVZ for GameCube/Wii games. I'm not aware of PS3, Xbox/360 games, or any of the other Nintendo system's best compressed standards, so if you or anyone else reading are aware of them I'd love to know.
To fill up more storage, look into adding Audiobookshelf as a companion to your Jellyfin instance for audiobooks. Ever since setting up my own instance I've been listening to more and more audiobooks (theyre great for work/commutes for me).
I only play PC games, and I'm not that into audiobooks, but the ROM idea is a good one though, thank you; built a game console for my partner a few years back using Kodi and libretro (it's awesome, recommend both) and a discarded laptop with the screen removed, though I basically stopped at PS1 games IIRC. Mostly it was used for N64 games. Might want to make an updated version as a gift.
I also plan to keep a full backup of wikipedia and erowid, and possibly resume helping keep libgen alive with the spare storage I guess (you basically seed the torrents for it, helps it stay alive - takes a lot of storage though).