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Home Lab Explorers

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Tips for Programmers

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3 contributions to Home Lab Explorers
What operating systems do you swear by in your Home Lab in 2026?
5 Operating Systems I Wouldn’t Run My Home Lab Without in 2026 #homelab https://www.virtualizationhowto.com/2026/04/5-operating-systems-i-wouldnt-run-my-home-lab-without-in-2026
What operating systems do you swear by in your Home Lab in 2026?
2 likes • 22d
Great options! I would also add Ubuntu Core as minimalist alternative to Ubuntu Server.
Anyone wondering about Docker Swarm in the Home Lab in 2026?
If you have been following the developments, there have been quite a few issues with Swarm since the release of Docker v29. Curious how many are using Swarm in their labs currently or even production? Is Docker Swarm Still Safe in 2026? #containers #homelab #docker #kubernetes https://www.virtualizationhowto.com/2026/03/is-docker-swarm-still-safe-in-2026/
Anyone wondering about Docker Swarm in the Home Lab in 2026?
1 like • Mar 30
Docker Swarm, in my opinion, is a great choice for running across multiple machines, without the complexity of Kubernetes. In very basic use cases, it might be a great fit!
Mainframe OS & emulator on Raspberry PI
Mainframes are a technical oddity: they seem legacy (most workloads in COBOL&FORTRAN; an interface that looks like it's still the 70s), arcane(JCL job scheduling, mainframe terminology), yet extremely powerful(very high concurrency, great security, extreme availability) and critical(government, banking). Getting some basic experience requires either: 1. Access to a real one, e.g. via IBM Cloud 2. Paying some serious money for a license to run zOS on a homelab machine(x86) 3. Running on top of a hardware emulator(Hercules), an ancestor of zOS that has an almost identical look and feel(MVS). For technical curiosity only, I found option 3 the most appealing and more specifically: https://www.prince-webdesign.nl/tk5 The package contains both the emulator and MVS, so once you set it up, you only need to install a 3270 terminal client(several options available for Linux, Mac, Windows). Initially, I set everything up on an Ubuntu VM, later on Ubuntu Docker and finally on a Raspberry PI 5. I found hosting on a dedicated Raspberry PI the most rewarding experience, as it feels like having a tiny mainframe in your home lab, with the caveat that for security reasons, it's best to host it on its dedicated network, without direct access to the internet. Hope you find this useful. (the 70s are back!)
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Ovidiu Pana
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@ovidiu-pana-2270
Coffee Driven Development

Active 6d ago
Joined Mar 30, 2026
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