I don't recall Reddit having unique content - what I do remember however was that it had aggregated content. It filled the role of Slashdot, Fark, and other sites, and it had a comment threading system that was far more usable. The memes came after.
boblin
"Don't you think he looks tired?"
That's s good trick.
Unless you run samba on them you won't see the Linux machines on Windows as a network computer.
That thing is going to be chugging power. Also note that it uses SAS drives, so you can't just use consumer SATA drives in it. ALSO 410s are from the 2009-2011 era. Do you really want to depend on a 10+ year old PSU? What's the cost going to be for you to find replacement parts?
Legally it is quite clear. Taking a description of a closed source program and writing a new one is ok in most cases (unless that description is API docs - see Cisco vs Arista). Taking a look at closed source software and then implementing your own version is poison as far as OSS goes. OP implemented the first version, so that's already a problem. They may get away is they describe what the program does to someone else and let them implement it, but OP would not be able to touch the source code
Depending on the capabilities of your network you should be able to set up QoS classes to prioritize certain traffic. Many off the shelf systems have out of the box rules for streaming content.
If you can find a Portuguese translation of Borges' books that would be a good choice.
Depends on the ratio. Producing and shipping new hardware has its cost too.
So... Seven Samurai in space?
16 and below is unambiguous. It's a child up to and including 16 years old. Compare that to "below 17" for example, which technically means the same but might be confused to include 17 by someone skimming the question.