What can you host with limited bandwidth but lots of storage?
from hodgepodgin@lemmy.zip to selfhosted@lemmy.world on 15 Feb 17:55
https://lemmy.zip/post/59161599

I have a limited 20Mbps upload speed but 16 TB of storage. I’m kinda just asking if there’s anything I can use it for. I’ll donate one purpose: seeding Anna’s Archive. Not sure on other causes.

#selfhosted

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ptz@dubvee.org on 15 Feb 18:01 next collapse

Just about anything as long as you don’t need to serve it to hundreds of people simultaneously. Hell, I once hosted Jellyfin over a 3G hotpot and it managed.

Pretty much any web-based app will work fine. Streaming servers (Emby, Plex, Jellyfin, etc) work fine for a few simultaneous people as long as you’re not trying to push 4K or something. 1080p can work fine at 4 Mbps or less (transcoding is your friend here). Chat servers (Matrix, XMPP, etc) are also a good candidate.

I hosted everything I wanted with 30 Mbps upload before I got symmetric fiber.

LazerDickMcCheese@sh.itjust.works on 15 Feb 18:03 collapse

Jesus dude…was it good?

ptz@dubvee.org on 15 Feb 18:07 collapse

1080p buffered generously but it worked :) The sweet spot was having it transcode to 720p (yay hardware acceleration). I wasn’t sharing it with anyone at the time, so it was just me watching at work on one phone while using my second phone at home for internet.

jws_shadotak@sh.itjust.works on 15 Feb 18:03 next collapse

I use my 50 mbps connection to host Plex/Jellyfin and I have a wireguard setup to allow me to access my files.

It works… Mostly. I have to manually set my streaming rate in Jellyfin to something reasonable to make it work remotely.

Downloading files from my server is an overnight process most times.

It also runs qbit with port forwarding to have faster uploading speeds. Everything manages to squeeze through that 50 mbps.

zerosouls@piefed.world on 15 Feb 18:05 next collapse

Local area NAS loaded with mp3/4’s

Decronym@lemmy.decronym.xyz on 15 Feb 18:10 next collapse

Acronyms, initialisms, abbreviations, contractions, and other phrases which expand to something larger, that I’ve seen in this thread:

Fewer Letters More Letters
Git Popular version control system, primarily for code
NAS Network-Attached Storage
Plex Brand of media server package
VPN Virtual Private Network
XMPP Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (‘Jabber’) for open instant messaging

5 acronyms in this thread; the most compressed thread commented on today has 7 acronyms.

[Thread #97 for this comm, first seen 15th Feb 2026, 18:10] [FAQ] [Full list] [Contact] [Source code]

henfredemars@infosec.pub on 15 Feb 18:27 next collapse

Seed. I’d rather have at least one whole copy in a swarm versus a bunch of really fast peers that don’t have the complete files.

Cyber@feddit.uk on 15 Feb 23:30 collapse

Yeah, this.

It’s annoying as hell waiting 6 weeks for someone to come online with that last 3%.

Anything I find like that I seed as long as I can

henfredemars@infosec.pub on 16 Feb 00:19 collapse

I have my seed box limit upload bandwidth to quite a low value, not because I hate leechers, but because I have to spread out my available data cap to maximize availability over the long term. If I blow through my data in three days I’m not as much good to the network.

wreckedcarzz@lemmy.world on 15 Feb 18:31 next collapse

Movies, TV, porn. That’s what I started with anyway…

20 up isn’t terrible; I made do with 10 for 8 years, and that included hosting said movies and shows to friends.

irmadlad@lemmy.world on 15 Feb 18:33 next collapse

An old school BBS like we used to do on dialup. Personally, Anna’s Archive seems a bit ‘hot’ right now and not because of popularity with users.

StrawberryPigtails@lemmy.sdf.org on 15 Feb 18:39 next collapse

Hosting for the public, it’s honestly going to depend on how many users you are going to have. Pretty much anything that is light on bandwidth should be doable. Websites, blogs, wikis. XMPP chat servers might work. Matrix might work as well. Adding to your seeding idea, you might seed torrents for any Linux distros you happen to like or build torrent seeds for projects with larger download sizes. I seem to recall a project that would enable you to seed peertube channels as well, though I can’t find the project right now.

If it’s just you and maybe a few family and friends,say over a mesh VPN, what ever you want, though video streaming may be a bit much for that bandwidth. Any other type of personal media should be very doable. Books, music, that sort of thing.

vogi@piefed.social on 15 Feb 19:05 collapse

For hosting websites something like grebedoc aka git-pages would be cool to have. (or just another instance of that)

zr0@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 15 Feb 22:28 next collapse

Anna’s Archive.

gravitas@lem.ugh.im on 15 Feb 23:55 next collapse

20mbps is enough for most things. It mostly limits how many peoppe you could share content to at once, but even then if you had say 4 people you wanted to stream a movie to jellyfin has options so you can limit each stream to 2mbps or whatever ends up working best.

grogreen@lemmy.world on 16 Feb 00:00 next collapse

Ttyi

DonutsRMeh@lemmy.world on 16 Feb 01:45 next collapse

You can do movies and shows and also music if you don’t go full blown 4k and it’s only you. Navidrome would run on a potato for music. lol

PeriodicallyPedantic@lemmy.ca on 16 Feb 04:17 next collapse

Store a lot of things you never access

Hope that helps 😌

fallaciousBasis@lemmy.world on 16 Feb 04:35 next collapse

Fserve territory.

Xdcc does the either end. Lots of bw, low storage.

hereiamagain@sh.itjust.works on 16 Feb 06:11 next collapse

Funny how perspective changes things.

Growing up we had dialup. Around 2009 we got 1.5mbps down, something like 300kbps up. DSL, for 8 people.

We had that until… 2014? 2016? Then we got 10/1.5, mbps, down/up respectively.

We had that until 2022 ish, when we got 30/10. And I started self hosting with ease, plenty of bandwidth for myself and my immediate family’s needs.

Only last year, 2025, did we finally strike gold and get access to fiber. 8000/8000 available, but it’s spendy.

I’m used to living with significantly less, so I opted for the lowest tier, 300/300.

I feel like I’m legitimately living in the future right now, so fast.

I feel for everyone who is stuck with slow Internet. But it’s all perspective. And from my perspective, 20 up is plenty for most things your average person wants to do. More is always better, obviously. But even then, you don’t need gargantuan pipes to self host.

I will say, these days, anything less than 10/10 is criminal. 20/20 is slow but manageable. 30/30 is more than most normal people realistically need, though obviously, again, more is always better 🤷‍♂️

irmadlad@lemmy.world on 16 Feb 18:14 next collapse

Growing up we had dialup. Around 2009 we got 1.5mbps down, something like 300kbps up

Ahhh, the ‘good old days’. Now days I have a business account with Spectrum. 1 gbps down/50 mbps up which is great for uploading and downloading large architectural drawings, but otherwise, it seems excessive.

MatSeFi@lemmy.liebeleu.de on 19 Feb 09:39 collapse

I will say, these days, anything less than 10/10 is criminal. 20/20 is slow but manageable. 30/30 is more than most normal people realistically need,

… till the start torrenting

hereiamagain@sh.itjust.works on 20 Feb 14:52 collapse

I am an avid Linux user and sharer of ISOs, never had a lick of trouble on 30/10.

10/1.5 was tough but doable.

1.5/300k was impossible.

eleitl@lemmy.zip on 16 Feb 13:54 next collapse

Run a libgen mirror (over VPN). Pin docs on IPFS.

fractumseraph@lemmy.piracy.social on 16 Feb 15:56 next collapse

eBooks and music. 16tb will fit everything you could ever want from MAM. (Not that you dbe abke to download it all with slot limits.)

Cloudstash@lemmy.world on 25 Feb 19:29 collapse

And movies, tv shows, game servers and what not. Kindly stop beliving your source needs to provide at 1000/1000, thats just a sales gimmic from the operators.

MatSeFi@lemmy.liebeleu.de on 19 Feb 09:44 collapse

All these speeds the providers advertise (especially the faster ones) are often cut down by bad peering. I often had an issue downloading bigger files from my storage when I was traveling. Only got some single digit MBit transfer speeds due to bad peering, while speed tests has shown decent results. When it comes down to Selfhosting the upload/download figures alone not always tell the truth. In my point of view 20Mbps is actually even sufficient for most of private stuff, even streaming HD content to one ore two peers simultaneously.