The Hyperfocus Doesn’t Ask Permission. It Just Starts Building.
AuDHD hyperfocus isn’t a productivity tool you switch on. It’s more like a flash flood, and my homelab is the proof of what it leaves behind.
AuDHD hyperfocus isn’t a productivity tool you switch on. It’s more like a flash flood, and my homelab is the proof of what it leaves behind.
I own both QNAP and Synology hardware, and the most useful thing I’ve learned has nothing to do with throughput or RAID types.
Not every self-hosted service earns its keep. Here’s an honest look at the ones I spun up with good intentions, ran for a while, and eventually shut down without a single regret.
I had 70TB of storage across four NAS units and still felt like my family photos were one drive failure away from disappearing. Immich didn’t fix my storage problem — it fixed my trust problem.
The enterprise world is just now discovering what homelab people figured out years ago: renting compute you can own is a bad deal. We weren’t ahead of the curve. We just couldn’t afford to be wrong.
Proxmox and TrueNAS get all the homelab hype, and I get why. I just don’t run either of them on my VMs, and it’s not because I don’t know what they are.
I have services running on my homelab right now that I couldn’t tell you the login for. Here’s what actually gets used every day, what’s quietly collecting dust, and what that gap actually costs.
Plex Pass isn’t a scam, but paying a monthly fee to unlock features on a server you already own and run yourself is a hard argument to make. Here’s where Emby ships what Plex sells.
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.