I recently helped my roommate shop for a small, personal web server. We wound up basing it on Intel’s Atom platform, and I was amazed at how cheap it was. The server (pictured above) came up to almost exactly $200, including shipping, and has a 1.6GHz Atom CPU, 512MB of Memory, and an 80GB hard drive. It runs Ubuntu 8.04 Server Edition.
The motherboard is a Mini-ITX form factor board, so the whole server is pretty small. It has a low power consumption, with the Atom CPU using only 4W of electricity. For anyone looking to host their own web page, the Atom is a great way to do it. So far, the box has handled everything we’ve thrown at it quite nicely. It’s running a LAMP server to host a few personal sites.
If you’re willing to spend a bit more (close to $300 for the same specs) you can get the server down even smaller by using a slimmer case and laptop components.
With the cost of hardware dropping, I wonder if we’ll see devices like this mass marketed to the general public. It’s mainly a matter of making a nice interface for it to easily allow setting up a photo or blog site. Imagine a desktop application that would allow a user to type up a blog post, upload photos, etc., then automatically upload that content to the server.
If anyone’s curious, the hardware we bought is here. The motherboard is currently out of stock, however, as Intel has released a dual core version. I’ll update the wishlist when Newegg gets the new board in.

December 10th, 2008 at 2:29 pm
[...] A while ago, I wondered about the possibility of a small, commercially marketed server for home use, and it looks like VIA is going to do that. They haven’t made a desktop application for administering it like I had suggested, and it seems to be more intended for internal use, such as file storage. [...]