this post was submitted on 20 Nov 2025
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Am I the only one here that got really bad experience with nextcloud and didn't figured how to make it work correctly?

I'm talking about painfully slow login pages, ages to show files, even upgraded hardware with disk entirely capable of saturing full gig network connection and still...
Getting only about ~30ish MB/s when downloading from nextcloud.
Incredly slow document loading with collabora..

Even if my hardware is not new-gen, a app like immich works flawlessly and loads everything instantly.
Is it the fault of next cloud or am I doing something wrong?
Are alternatives like seafile or openCloud better?

Willing your help fellow selfhosters

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[–] cecilkorik@lemmy.ca 2 points 7 months ago

Nextcloud is just really slow. It is what it is, I don't use it for any things that are huge, numerous, or need speed. For that I use SyncThing or something even more specialized depending on what exactly I'm trying to do.

Nextcloud is just my easy and convenient little dropbox, and I treat it like it's an oldschool free dropbox with limited space that's going to nag me to upgrade if I put too much stuff in it. It won't nag me to upgrade, but it will get slow. So I just don't stress it out. So I only use it to store little convenience things that I want easy access to on all my machines without any fuss. For documents and "home directory" and syncing my calendars and stuff like that it's great and serves the purpose.

I haven't used Seafile. Features sound good, minus the AI buzzword soup, but it looks a little too corporate-enterprisey for me, with minimal commitment to open source and no actual link to anything open source on their website, I don't doubt that it exists, somewhere, but that raises red flags for potential future (if not in-progress) enshittification to me. After eventually finding their github repo (with no help from them) I finally found a link to build instructions and... it's a broken link. They don't seem to actually be looking for contributions or they're just going through the motions. Open source "community" is clearly not the target audience for their "community edition", not really.

I'll stick to SyncThing.