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this post was submitted on 09 Dec 2024
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i really need such strong hardware for hosting these basic things? my dream gaming pc isn't that powerful. This seems very unrealistic, what you mentioned is top-tier hardware
All of those components should be used and a few generations behind to save cost. A used Quadro m4000 is about $100 usd in the US. A used Xeon based office PC all in should be ~$400-600 USD max stateside and you can find whichever drives you need to add. I don't know what your local economy is like or what you can expect. If you're able to find a used office PC or and older device, give that a try and see if it works. If you have 15 users all hitting a computer it's going to take resources. Those resources are going to depend on what they're doing. If you want enterprise fault tolerance, ECC may be worth the extra cost. If you want to budget it out you can probably get everything you want running on something 4-5 generations behind for around $100 USD + drives cost.
Consider if you're going media streaming like a Plex/jellyfin server. It would be kinda similar to playing 15 YouTube videos on your desktop.
If it's 15 users with maybe 2-3 hitting it at any one time then you can build cheaper and get decent performance. If you're just hosting static pages/simple programs with low resource requirements anything post 2010 with 4 cores and 8GB RAM will probably run it fine and work as file storage for cameras.
any quadro cards are very rare in my country, it is hard to find one, especially on the used market. And around 4-5 users will go on the network at the same time, plus the cameras. 400$ would be too much, but 100$ is pretty good. currently i'm browsing used PCs from 2012-2016 around the 100$ category
In that case, and if you do need a gpu (such as jellyfin, Plex or another reason) look at the GPU transcoding link in my previous comment. You can flash Nvidia consumer cards or price compare with Intel A series GPUs. This means a bit of tinkering but if you need transcoding and cheap Quadros aren't available to you, it's an option.
You can always go for a used PC with integrated graphics like Intel and see if that works for your use case. Follow the recommendation for a big case with lots of space, look at any of the dell Optiplex or similar office PCs. If you have specific applications Google them + minimum or recommended requirements. An SSD as a boot drive is absolutely worth it over an HDD.
Your camera setup probably won't need an external graphics card but if it does you can always upgrade later.