Oh, most of the Redditors still think the forum, and quite a number of the "old heads", suck. But that's OK. :D:DA heavy price was paid to get to this point. So I hope you appreciate how good we have it today.
I'm not surprised - it seems like quite a number of products with community support end up with a few "power users" who, whether intentionally or not, really set the direction on decisions such as these. Personally, I'm not the type to be a cheapskate in the first place, and I've liked Supermicro gear for a long time (I mean, I've got 8 SM boxes in the rack in my server closet... 90 cores in total... at home... I'm only a little sick, I promise!) My first FN build was my current production 16-core box, and I would never dream of trying to run such a product on a cast-off old laptop. But I'm weird.Was the reason what you thought? ;-)
I was just amused and terribly pleased by your comment, because yes there's a reason for that, and on one hand it's fair to say that the reason is because Supermicro is an awesome platform, but on the other hand, things could have gone very differently and we could have ended up with a lot of consumer cheapskate builds on random problematic hardware had there been fewer people here willing to debate the finer points of ECC memory, PSU sizing, system cooling, reliable HBA and network adapters, and all the other fiddly aspects that contribute to engineering excellence.
And now I'm considering building a second box for an off-site backup/ZFS replication target... it'll probably go at the parents' home, so it won't be a rack mount SM box, and I kinda hate that...