MichaelMKKelly

joined 11 months ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago

currently I have a nvidia 1650 super set up with a passthrough on proxmox then attached to the jellyfin docker container. I have too considered getting an arc as it seems a good deal for thee functionality.

but as someone else has mentioned it can apparently take a decent amount of effort to make it work. if your willing to jump through the hoops then sure its probably a leaning exercise but I decided to just use a cheap older card for now until support is a bit more "out the box" then maybe try again (or the server might get just a hand me down from a desktop upgrade too)

also I don't really need the upgrade with a 1650 super and a E5-2618Lv4 my use case is more than covered.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 11 months ago

I used a dual Xeon workstation for a while and it used more power then my entire rack does now. I rebuilt my entire network this year and power consumption was a bit part of the planning process and I don't believe it limited me getting what I wanted.

best advice is probably to spend a little more and get more modern hardware which will be not only better but massively more efficient. C-States have come a very long way in the last 10 years or so. there seems to be a flood of older dual Xeon workstations on the used market and I think its probably due to their power consumption. they might seem like a bargain but you end up paying for it in power (also heat and noise).

I learnt towards intel for my servers but use Ryzen for my current desktop. but either way I think something more modern will be a lot better. I think intel's come out on top for efficiency but maybe that is just personal bias.

for numbers:

my dual xeon workstation idled at about 170 watts on its own
my current rack with network equipment/2 servers/a few pi's/etc... idles at about 140 watts

another tip is to set up homeassistant if your not running it already and get some power monitoring going(shelly products recommended). having data will help you make power decisions and helps with mindset.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago

you haven't really given much to go on but a couple of ideas based upon different interpretations:

if your talking about "generic 2.4ghz" check to see if there internal switches to change the frequency range. I have seen stuff that has 2 or 3 "channels" and a little switch on both the device and the remote.

if your talking about some kind of IR remote then the simple solution is to probably solve the issue with line of sight

maybe some more info might help? or if there a reason why you cant reveal much more then work out what you can hint at maybe?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago

I use the KASA-KP303 which then feeds a bigger power strip with a longer cable.
as someone else mentioned you could just single plug extension the KASA too. assuming your not running big power through it then anything that feels robust is probably fine. another route if your confident doing it safely is that you could ditch the warranty and just replace the cable on the kasa with a longer one.

I haven't had any issues but I also don't really use its "smart" features much. I needed to replace a surge protector and it seemed like a good deal. its set up with my homeassistant in case I want to do something with it. the kasa app works fine too from what I can tell but other then inital setup its not something I use.