- Nov 29, 1999
- 16,408
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Since I replaced my wife's desktop with a new laptop, I was going to turn her PC into our network file server (about 1.5TB,) stripping out the video card and using onboard.
I pretty much just slap the latest Linux Mint on all our machines, but is there any real advantage to installing a server OS instead? I just expect the PC to be on 24/7, serving media and data to our network (non-raided) and off-loading my tv torrent downloader, and all the miscellaneous scripts that currently run on my PC (media file renaming and moving, backups, etc.) Maybe even a proxy/filtering software. Some of the tools are java-based gui apps, so I'm guessing I'll want an xserver/display running, if only a minimal one.
Any real issue with just putting Mint 9 Desktop on it? Maybe the LXDE version?
I pretty much just slap the latest Linux Mint on all our machines, but is there any real advantage to installing a server OS instead? I just expect the PC to be on 24/7, serving media and data to our network (non-raided) and off-loading my tv torrent downloader, and all the miscellaneous scripts that currently run on my PC (media file renaming and moving, backups, etc.) Maybe even a proxy/filtering software. Some of the tools are java-based gui apps, so I'm guessing I'll want an xserver/display running, if only a minimal one.
Any real issue with just putting Mint 9 Desktop on it? Maybe the LXDE version?