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  1. #1
    Senior Member pkfox's Avatar
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    Best server for Transporter

    Hi all, having just moved home I don't have a remote place to site my old ReadyNas NV box which runs Squeezecenter and feeds my TP ( or whatever it's called now ) which is necessary because of noise ( don't know if it's the fan or the drives ) I've just tried siting it under the stairs but I can still here it in the lounge. So I'm thinking it might be time to say goodbye to the old girl and buy something else. Anyone know of a reasonable priced quiet device that runs SC well ? preferably running Linux.

    many thanks
    When the going gets weird - the weird turn pro. Hunter S Thompson

    CD's -> EAC/Grip -> ReadyNas NV -> CAT5 -> Sonicwall -> TP -> Meridian 551 -> Monitor Audio Gold -> Me :-)

  2. #2
    Senior Member aubuti's Avatar
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    "reasonably priced" is a pretty vague term, but as we're in the Audiophiles forum I'll assume you mean "expensive" :-)

    If you want quiet, capable, and convenient you probably can't do better than the Fit-PC line (www.fit-pc.com/web/). The Fit-PC computers are also ridiculously small. They take 2.5" hard drives, which are also a lot quieter than their 3.5" counterparts. Or if you have the budget, get an SSD. And in the grand scheme of things, the Fit-PC is not absurdly expensive. It's more than many other alternatives, but it is quite reasonable for what it is.

  3. #3
    Senior Member audiomuze's Avatar
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    HP Microserver
    Linux finally gets a great audio tagger: puddletag - now packaged in most Linux distributions.

  4. #4
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    I built a nice custom linux server/desktop machine. It does a number of duties besides just LMS. It hosts files for my mac mini (still trying to decide if I like XBMC or Plex as a UI for that). I also use it as a primary desktop for browsing and photo editing. It also runs a number of VMs for testing some routing configurations.

    My shopping list looked like this:

    Lian-Li PC-Q08
    http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16811112265

    Intel mini-itx mainboard
    http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16813121513
    I would probably get this one now: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16813121597

    The only bad part of this board is that it only supports 4x SATA and I had to use the PCIe slot for a SATA board. If I didn't use it as a desktop, I would have probably gone with a supermicro Atom D525 server board because they support IPMI.
    http://www.supermicro.com/products/m...PA-HF-D525.cfm

    Whatever CPU and ram floats your boat, I went with 8G of ram and i5-2400S

    I have 6x WD RE4-GP 2T server drives setup with Linux software raid. I have a small mirror setup for the root fs, 140G of space for the rest of the OS and 100G for /home. Then the rest of the space (7T) is a raid6 volume for backups (crashplan of my family's laptops) and other media.

    I also have an external USB-3 drive or two that I offline backup the important stuff to, like my FLAC files.


    Of course, none of this is audiophile related, except that I have my audio system (Transporter, Revel speakers, Musical Fidelity amp) networked to it.

  5. #5
    Senior Member audiomuze's Avatar
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    That's way too much pc & cost if all you want is a quiet box on which to host LMS.

  6. #6
    Senior Member pkfox's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by aubuti View Post
    "reasonably priced" is a pretty vague term, but as we're in the Audiophiles forum I'll assume you mean "expensive" :-)

    If you want quiet, capable, and convenient you probably can't do better than the Fit-PC line (www.fit-pc.com/web/). The Fit-PC computers are also ridiculously small. They take 2.5" hard drives, which are also a lot quieter than their 3.5" counterparts. Or if you have the budget, get an SSD. And in the grand scheme of things, the Fit-PC is not absurdly expensive. It's more than many other alternatives, but it is quite reasonable for what it is.
    Thanks I'll check it out.
    When the going gets weird - the weird turn pro. Hunter S Thompson

    CD's -> EAC/Grip -> ReadyNas NV -> CAT5 -> Sonicwall -> TP -> Meridian 551 -> Monitor Audio Gold -> Me :-)

  7. #7
    Senior Member pkfox's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by audiomuze View Post
    HP Microserver
    Thanks I will have a look
    When the going gets weird - the weird turn pro. Hunter S Thompson

    CD's -> EAC/Grip -> ReadyNas NV -> CAT5 -> Sonicwall -> TP -> Meridian 551 -> Monitor Audio Gold -> Me :-)

  8. #8
    Senior Member pkfox's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by SuperQ View Post
    I built a nice custom linux server/desktop machine. It does a number of duties besides just LMS. It hosts files for my mac mini (still trying to decide if I like XBMC or Plex as a UI for that). I also use it as a primary desktop for browsing and photo editing. It also runs a number of VMs for testing some routing configurations.

    My shopping list looked like this:

    Lian-Li PC-Q08
    http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16811112265

    Intel mini-itx mainboard
    http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16813121513
    I would probably get this one now: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16813121597

    The only bad part of this board is that it only supports 4x SATA and I had to use the PCIe slot for a SATA board. If I didn't use it as a desktop, I would have probably gone with a supermicro Atom D525 server board because they support IPMI.
    http://www.supermicro.com/products/m...PA-HF-D525.cfm

    Whatever CPU and ram floats your boat, I went with 8G of ram and i5-2400S

    I have 6x WD RE4-GP 2T server drives setup with Linux software raid. I have a small mirror setup for the root fs, 140G of space for the rest of the OS and 100G for /home. Then the rest of the space (7T) is a raid6 volume for backups (crashplan of my family's laptops) and other media.

    I also have an external USB-3 drive or two that I offline backup the important stuff to, like my FLAC files.


    Of course, none of this is audiophile related, except that I have my audio system (Transporter, Revel speakers, Musical Fidelity amp) networked to it.

    Thanks but that's overkill for my needs, I just need a quieter version of what I have now. Thanks anyway.
    When the going gets weird - the weird turn pro. Hunter S Thompson

    CD's -> EAC/Grip -> ReadyNas NV -> CAT5 -> Sonicwall -> TP -> Meridian 551 -> Monitor Audio Gold -> Me :-)

  9. #9
    Senior Member pkfox's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by audiomuze View Post
    That's way too much pc & cost if all you want is a quiet box on which to host LMS.
    Absolutely !!!
    When the going gets weird - the weird turn pro. Hunter S Thompson

    CD's -> EAC/Grip -> ReadyNas NV -> CAT5 -> Sonicwall -> TP -> Meridian 551 -> Monitor Audio Gold -> Me :-)

  10. #10
    Senior Member pkfox's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by aubuti View Post
    "reasonably priced" is a pretty vague term, but as we're in the Audiophiles forum I'll assume you mean "expensive" :-)

    If you want quiet, capable, and convenient you probably can't do better than the Fit-PC line (www.fit-pc.com/web/). The Fit-PC computers are also ridiculously small. They take 2.5" hard drives, which are also a lot quieter than their 3.5" counterparts. Or if you have the budget, get an SSD. And in the grand scheme of things, the Fit-PC is not absurdly expensive. It's more than many other alternatives, but it is quite reasonable for what it is.
    Hi Aubuti, do you have one of these units ? They do look appealing but the graphics capability would be wasted with my setup.
    When the going gets weird - the weird turn pro. Hunter S Thompson

    CD's -> EAC/Grip -> ReadyNas NV -> CAT5 -> Sonicwall -> TP -> Meridian 551 -> Monitor Audio Gold -> Me :-)

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