The Intel N100 killed the Raspberry Pi for home servers
For years, the Raspberry Pi sat at the center of countless home labs because there simply wasn’t anything else in its price range that could compete. It became the default choice for hobbyists who wanted to run containers, self-hosted apps, and small network utilities without dedicating an entire PC to the job. That era had a certain charm and a sense of scrappy experimentation that made the Pi feel special. Today, that feeling remains, but the hardware landscape around it has changed in ways that are difficult to ignore. The arrival of cheap Intel N100 mini PCs didn’t just disrupt the home server market; it transformed it.
For years, the Raspberry Pi sat at the center of countless home labs because there simply wasn’t anything else in its price range that could compete. It became the default choice for hobbyists who wanted to run containers, self-hosted apps, and small network utilities without dedicating an entire PC to the job. That era had a certain charm and a sense of scrappy experimentation that made the Pi feel special. Today, that feeling remains, but the hardware landscape around it has changed in ways that are difficult to ignore. The arrival of cheap Intel N100 mini PCs didn’t just disrupt the home server market; it transformed it.
William Garcia
Boston
Boston
Published by: aplhsindia.in
