I have been running hass.io for around 1 month, and is starting to understand how to use it, and got a great structure with inspiration from @frenck
I have been running this setup:
1 x RPI3b+: Main hass.io running everything exepts whats running on the server.hassio
1 x RPI3b+: Server hass, running influxdb, motioneye, grafana and pihole. (To free up memory and cpu for main hassio)
Now i brought a Intel-Nuc8i3BEK with 4gb ram and 120gb ssd, and i want to run everything on that exept i want to keep an RPI running pihole.
But im looking at my plugged in NUC right now, and i dont know how i put the image on the ssd and get started? (I dont have mouse and keyboard)…
I have read the install documentation, and watched some videos… But im totally lost
I would recommend you install your choice of linux. I use ubuntu but it shoudn’t matter. And then run Hassio in docker. That way you can still use the NUC for other things in the future. But you will need a mouse and keyboard for the install. Is there no way you can borrow it from an other system?
a mouse/keyboard is like $5 at the local supermarket… you really need one of those… will save a lot of grief with setup and in the future.
Even to update the BIOS, it’s pretty much impossible without a keyboard. Setup for BIOS likewise. You lash out and get an i3 NUC but 4gb RAM and 120gb hdd??? I guess funds are an issue?
Nope, my instructions are no longer valid. There is no USB installer image for the NUC as yet. You have to image the whole SSD with the image or do that through a Linux live distro.
Have a NUC running with Proxmox here as well. Works great. Have a VM running with Ubuntu on which I have installed hass.io. Super easy for having multiple VMs, making snapshots etc.
I’m running Hassio on a NUC as well. I installed Windows 10 pro, containing teamviewer (for remote access), a cloudservice and Virtualbox.
On virtualbox I’m running hassio with the VDI installation file that’s provided on the hassio installation page.
I’m happy with this setup because it’s easy to make backups (just clone the VM and put it in the cloud storage), it’s very fast and it’s easy to install.