cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/40805695
I have two machines:
- 2014 Mac Mini
- HP Pavilion g7
Mac Mini 2014:
Very slow, probably can no longer be updated, nor can it run worthwhile programs.
HP Pavilion g7
Extremely bulky, chunky, and doesn’t even turn on unless it’s plugged in. It’s basically a desktop since the battery doesn’t hold a charge.
I put Linux on it (Mint I think) a few months ago as a weekend experiment.
Question:
What should I do with them? Are they worth salvaging? Should I simply donate or recycle them?
I was thinking I could use at least one of them as a home media server or something so that I can disconnect my Smart TV from the internet, but I’m not sure if they will hold or how I would even control them from my phone (Android) if I’m sitting on the couch.
Open to all ideas. I’m somewhat technical (perhaps far less than the Lemmy community), but I don’t know much about Linux or the command line unless I’m given step by step instructions on how to do something.


The only bummer is the requirement of wired Ethernet
I got wireless working in Debian on a 2012 Mac Mini, maybe there’s still hope?
Your name gave me a chuckle. At first I thought it said ‘lemmy_clear_my_throat’ However, if you do somehow manage to deploy Proxmox with Wi-Fi capabilities, I’ve got a project, so do please share any findings.
Didn’t mean to give false hope, just meant that after a bunch of tinkering I eventually got WiFi working on the Mac Mini running debian itself, so maybe there’s hope for wireless in proxmox, but unfortunately I have no experience with that.
With proxmox?
Nah, this was for the Mac Mini running debian itself. I haven’t had any experience running proxmox, but was just idly wondering that maybe there’s a path to get it working in there given the there was a (PITA) path for getting it working in debian.
If it has wired Ethernet, proxmox is like, a small miracle of convenience. You can slice and dice multiple machines from one. It’s litterally one for the best pieces of diy infra support I’ve ever experienced…
But you gotta be hardwired.
Removed by mod
any other linux distro can do vms and containers, too. arguably it’s easier to do that than with proxmox.
but yeah, i wanted to check it out so threw it on the drive i pulled from my old broken laptop to check it out and discovered the wifi omission. i even tried to install base debian and ensure wifi was set up first then convert to a proxmox install. sadly, proxmox’s network stack is in conflict with any other linux network libs and actively uninstalled whichever one i had set up during the proxmox conversion.
i get their reasoning for not supporting wifi after looking it up but imho completely removing it as a possibility is a bit not cool, bro. i wasn’t trying to do any high availability or multiple nodes or anything like that so it wouldn’t have been an issue for my use case anyway.
TIL I didn’t realize that Proxmox doesn’t support Wi-Fi. Well, now I can scratch one project off the list.