I do similar stuff with my home server, thus I am averse to a hosted solution.

-- Kimball

On Feb 19, 2009, at 11:41 AM, Shane Hathaway wrote:

Nicholas Leippe wrote:
Not if it's a *personal* server for his home lan... his local 100Mb/ GigE is going to outperform anything crossing his DSL/cable connection hands down.

Right. I have both, a home server and an externally hosted virtual server. The external server is better for hosting web sites, while the home server is better for unusual stuff like:

- Participating in 30+ mailing lists (procmail helps a lot)

- Running buildbot (on multiple virtual server configurations)

- Hosting a VPN

- Running Windows inside a VirtualBox VM, inside a TightVNC server, for business accounting software. The Linux choices don't handle taxes. The VNC service is accessible anywhere on the VPN and quite responsive when you use "-encoding tight -bgr233".

- Providing a gateway to my home network so I can fix stuff remotely for my family.

- Storing a photo archive of 50+ gigabytes and growing.

- Miscellaneous experiments involving potentially crash-prone or bloated software.

Of course all this stuff creates the need for a good home backup strategy. I have 2 large USB drives and I use rdiff-backup to update the backup. At all times, at least one of the two drives is in cold storage offsite and I rotate them every few weeks.

Shane


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