(no title)
bagrow
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3 years ago
Anyone else annoyed at how narrow the term Homelab really is relative to what it could be? Any scientific or maker hobbies could take place in a "home lab," from breeding seedlings, to soldering and electronics work, to 3D printing. But it really means just networking and servers?Seems too narrow to me.
hnaccount141|3 years ago
bmitc|3 years ago
morganherlocker|3 years ago
noizejoy|3 years ago
rnd0|3 years ago
xen2xen1|3 years ago
DoreenMichele|3 years ago
qqqwerty|3 years ago
I am not really interested in reading about this kind of stuff[1]. I have a few raspberry pi's that serve as my "home lab" and that is all I really need right now. But I suspect the term took off because it gets a bunch of people like me to click.
[1] Not that I don't think it should exist, its just not high on my list of interests right now.
rnd0|3 years ago
I wasn't before I read this thread!
I mean, my "home lab" are old computers from 2008 to 2016 and half of what I "do" involves simply testing what weird installations (eg netbsd) I can get up and running. It's for tinkering -playing; the "lab" part coming from experimentation: "What happens when I do this...?"
I agree when it comes to the definition being to narrow. Then again, I mostly engage with it on /r/homelab and the HN attitude seems to be much more restrictive...too restrictive for my tastes, personally.
myself248|3 years ago
itomato|3 years ago