Over the past few years ive gotten desktops from various smaller thrift stores but not i feel like i have too many and im not sure what to so with them? Do i save them and turn them into a bugger project? Do i make a nas out of one of them? Im stumped theres so many things to do with a pc that i dont know where to start, or if this is even the right place to post in?

I pretty much saved theses from e-waste and scalpers but most of the machines are devices nobody wants or has a issue.

  • fruitycoder@sh.itjust.works
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    1 minute ago

    I recently turned every old junker and some nicer ones into a Harvester cluster. The really old ones I use as cold storage devices that I actually shut off when I don’t need them.

  • MNByChoice@midwest.social
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    4 hours ago

    theres so many things to do with a pc that i dont know where to start

    Pick the first project that you think of and chase it down. If it sucks, then reformat the drive and do something else. Video game systems and file servers are great. So is installing a different OS on each, just to experience the differences side by side.

    Do NOT continue “analysis paralysis”.

  • sobchak@programming.dev
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    3 hours ago

    A lot, depending on your interests and the hardware itself. I’m running a NAS (TrueNAS) on an old machine that also runs a bittorrent client and immich as TrueNAS “apps.” I’m running an *arr stack and jellyfin on another old machine. I’ve got another old machine running an i2p router, hyphanet node, and a few other services. In the past, I’ve used old machines as routers (pfsense), openhab/home assistant machines, game servers, ZoneMinder server, etc.

  • grue@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    For any machines that are too inefficient to be worth continuing to compute with, you could at least save the power supplies for electronics projects. I’ve got some 12V addressable RGB Christmas lights being powered by an old ATX power supply, for example.

  • Digit@lemmy.wtf
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    3 hours ago

    Some ideas:

    • webserver (e.g. for a little personal website, maybe even host some fediverse things)
    • irc
    • weather monitor
    • distro tester
    • local LLM ~(they’re getting more and more efficient)~

    If you’ve several of similar performance, you could:

    • host lan parties, for classic games. Maybe some Quake, OpenTTD, Luanti
  • communism@lemmy.ml
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    3 hours ago

    I’m in a similar boat. I use old computers for spare parts and hobby projects (e.g. I did Linux From Scratch on an old second-hand Thinkpad I picked up on a whim). I think cheap second hand computers are great for tinkerers e.g. you can flash custom firmware without worrying about bricking the mobo.

    You could also use them as servers if you have any services you want to host.

    Also if you truly have no use for them, fix them up, install something like Linux Mint on them, and give them away.

  • morto@piefed.social
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    3 hours ago

    If you want something out from the ordinary, maybe build a retro gaming/tech museum and make it open for the public. You can even host events like gaming competitions, or thematic presentations. Charge a small make up for the costs, and maybe you can even make it your living later in life.

  • solrize@lemmy.ml
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    5 hours ago

    If less than 10 years old they’re probably usable with some upgrades here and there. Finding a use for them is harder. Maybe just get them working and give them to friends who can use them.

  • mmmm@sopuli.xyz
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    7 hours ago

    Pretty sure there should be some nonprofit that will gladly get and assemble them so i.e. children on remote places can have a computer.