Four NAS Units, One Family, and the Uncomfortable Truth About What Gets Watched
I built a media server empire spanning four NAS units and a dedicated Emby setup. My family mostly watches the same twelve things on repeat.
I built a media server empire spanning four NAS units and a dedicated Emby setup. My family mostly watches the same twelve things on repeat.
Self-hosting a blog on your own hardware sounds like the power move. And it is. But nobody tells you what you’re signing up for when the glamour wears off.
I don’t use hostnames like SERVER01 or DESKTOP-A4F2C. Every machine on my network has a real name, a personality, and a reason it got that name. Here’s the system behind it.
I run both Authelia and Authentik in production — not because I couldn’t pick one, but because I learned the hard way that they’re solving different problems. Here’s what the comparison guides won’t tell you.
Every shortcut I took setting up my homelab made sense at the time. Six months later, I was untangling decisions I barely remembered making — and that’s the real cost nobody talks about.
After 28 years of running various home lab setups, I’ve learned that the hidden costs go way beyond your electric bill. Here’s what nobody tells you before you start hoarding old servers.
Running a homelab isn’t all rainbow cables and perfectly organized racks — here’s the real talk about what it takes to keep your digital kingdom running.
A comprehensive PowerShell health check script that monitors everything from CPU usage to AD replication, because finding out your DC is sick after users start complaining is nobody’s idea of fun.
My basement looks like a server farm had a baby with a Radio Shack from 1995, and honestly, I wouldn’t have it any way else.
Building a homelab is like collecting vintage cars, except these beauties live in your closet and consume electricity like a small Tennessee town. Here’s why every tech enthusiast needs their own digital playground.