I’m looking to create a Plex/media server so my family and I can stream our Blu-rays. It would also serve as a cloud of sorts. This is my first time making a server. A thorough search on the i3 has been made, but I remain unsure if an 8 yo processor will meet my needs.

At most, we would be streaming on one or two devices. Aside from that, the storage would just be a nifty way to keep my photos off of iCloud. I plan on making it redundant, but I need to get my hands on another 8TB drive.

  • Sad_Window_3192@alien.topB
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    11 months ago

    I was using a old Atom Netbook with 2GB RAM as a Plex server. No transcoding, but it certainly did the job! The only limitation was it was all from an external USB2 drive, but even then it was still decent depending on the file. No 4k files, but it worked with 1080p.

  • JaJe92@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Yes.

    I have i3 2nd gen, older model than yours and run Plex smoothly. As long you don’t need transcoding, you’re fine and can do multiple streams at same time.

  • mrln_bllmnn@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    My plex Container has four Cores and 2 GB RAM. Works fine with just one Core transcoding 1080p24 HEVC.

    (Ryzen 7 5700G)

  • tenekev@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    If you own the hardware, sure, use it. It will suffice.

    If you plan on buying this ancient hardware, do not do it!

    There is some really anecdotal evidence from the other comments.

    Check out Haswell capabilities https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intel_Quick_Sync_Video

    It decodes h.264 and that’s about it. Yes, plex does not transcode for free but hardware is hardware. Spending money on obsolete, lacking hardware is not wise.

    If you are buying, go for 6th gen, 8th gen or 11th gen. These are the sweetspots that are either cheap, widely available or very capable.

  • linxbro5000@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    A small check at https://ark.intel.com/content/www/de/de/ark/products/77486/intel-core-i34150-processor-3m-cache-3-50-ghz.html shows me, that the cpu supports quicksync. It means you can use hardware transcoding (if you have a Plex pass). Maybe the quality is not a nice as a more modern cpu but it will do just fine with 1080p videos. Should be a very ok Plex server - if you already own the hardware. I would not be buy this ancient machine to become my next Plex server.

  • heathenyak@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    it should be fine, your limiting factor is going to be number of transcode streams. When a plex client connects to a plex server and tries to stream a video the client and server will talk and discuss what formats the client can accept and if the video is not in that format the plex server will transcode it on the fly to a format that the client can play. The more powerful the machine the more transcoding streams it can handle at once. But realistically do you need more than like 2 or 3 at most? probably not.

  • Former-Brilliant-177@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Ample. There’s not much processing going on, it’s mainly shunting files around the network. Look toward improving that side of things to improve connectivity and user experience. A wired network is generally faster and more reliable than wifi, if possible.

  • LiiilKat@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    My current build is a small quad-core Xeon from the Haswell era and does just fine. I added a Quadro P400 for PLEX transcoding. If the rig also did storage, it would also be fine. You’d be good if you wanted to add a Quadro card to yours.

      • LiiilKat@alien.topB
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        1 year ago

        Somewhere around 35 watts maximum. It can handle multiple 1080p streams, but only one 4K stream, and the limitation is due to the 2GB of RAM on the card.

        I have a very low-use server, so the card is perfect for my needs.

  • JoaGamo@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    If you ever get a system that supports hardware transcoding, consider jellyfin instead of plex, transcoding has no $cost there