| Laptops are also not really designed to be always on. I've used some like this in the past, but there are things to watch for: - batteries might not like being constantly charged. You might kill them, hopefully they don't swell. It might be interesting to remove the battery if you can, but then you indeed lose the feature they provide to survive power cuts. - the disk drives are constantly parking their heads, make sure that the parking policy is ok (won't wear them to fast). Maybe less of an issue with many laptops coming with SSDs. - some laptops just heat too much and power off too often, especially in summer. - their hardware might end up dying quite fast. I think I would still use an old laptop as a home server if I had suitable one, especially since it helps making such a machine useful for a longer time even when they are not quite usable for the web of today anymore (I like the reuse spirit it has), but I've found my rockpro64 (a nice single board computer) way more reliable in this role. I guess YMMV depending on the laptop models. I can definitely imagine that a solid laptop with its battery removed can work well as a server. |
I’m surprised that the Linux distributions I use don’t do this automatically but I bet it could be configured.