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For the most part, these are computers which are meant to stick around through 2-4 upgrade cycles of your other computers. Just doing various low power 24/7 tasks like file serving.

You could be like “well that’s stupid, I’m going to make a balls to the wall build server that also serves storage with recent components” but the build server components will become obsolete faster then the storage components, it can lead to incidental complexity to try and run something like windows games on a NAS operating system because you tried to consolidate on one computer, being forced to use things like ECC will compromise absolute performance, you’ll want to have the computer by your desk potentially but also in a closet since it has loud storage, you’re liable to run out of pcie lanes and slots, you want to use open cooling for the high performance components and a closed case for the spinning rust, it’s all a bit awkward.

Much simpler is to just treat the NAS as an appliance that serves files, maybe runs a plex server, some surveillance, a weather station, rudimentary monitoring, and home automation. Things for which something like a v2000 is overkill. Then use breeding edge chips in things like cell phones and laptops. Then have the two computers do different jobs. Longer product cycles between processors makes things like support cheaper to maintain for long term periods of time and offer low prices.



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