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Thread: NAS - Network attached storage and media server?

  1. #1
    VladTepes's Avatar
    VladTepes is offline Major Part of the Heart and Soul of AULRO Subscriber
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    NAS - Network attached storage and media server?

    Been looking around and the Synology 413j seems perhaps the best option.(and value for money)

    (read does the job well and good user interface easy to set up and use).

    Interested in people's views and experience if they have a set up liek this or similar.

    Was also looking at the Synology DS411 and the QNAP TS400 series.


    Basically looking to keep all my music, photos, movies, documents etc in one place in a RAID system to prevent (or at least largely reduce the chances of) loss.

    Then of course I'd need to get some 2.5" hard drives for it - any tips on brands which are good and ones to avoid?

    (Not sure yet how much overall storage I will need for the moment and foreseeable future) but it will be WELL BELOW the potential 4 x 3TB possible with the 413j.
    It's not broken. It's "Carbon Neutral".


    gone


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    I've been running a qnap for about 5 years, I use it to stream movies to ipad, plus a heap of other uses, great unit, has raid also which is good for redundancy, I have 2x 2tb but as I run raid 1 I lose half so 2tb max

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    Hi aussie,
    What model qnap did you buy as I've heard that some of there models aren't that reliable.

    cheers

    2014 Freelander SE TD4
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    ive got a qnap 412

    i wouldnt buy one again

  5. #5
    VladTepes's Avatar
    VladTepes is offline Major Part of the Heart and Soul of AULRO Subscriber
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    I'm hearing good things about the Synology ones thus my research is directed that way.

    Looking for best place (read cheapest) to buy one and quality hdd's to suit.
    It's not broken. It's "Carbon Neutral".


    gone


    1993 Defender 110 ute "Doris"
    1994 Range Rover Vogue LSE "The Luxo-Barge"
    1994 Defender 130 HCPU "Rolly"
    1996 Discovery 1

    current

    1995 Defender 130 HCPU and Suzuki GSX1400


  6. #6
    County Steve Guest
    Hi,

    The Synology units are excellent. To date they have been very generous with the software updates so they will stay current longer than many other appliance type devices. We are currently using western digital drives in them and they are proving very reliable.

    Steve

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    QNAP 209 PRO2 hasn't missed a beat in 5 years

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    Vlad, you may have joined the dots between here and a comment on another site, but having been badly burnt by the Netgear ReadyNAS experiences, I went the other way with open source.

    My first experiment was with an old Pentium 4 PC running Freenas in Raid 1 config over two drives. It ran for months without trouble so I decided to go that way for keeps. I've since purchased two HP N40L Proliant Microservers and have one running Freenas and the other Nas4Free. Both have been excellent. Other than ironing out permissions issues stemming from multiple user accounts sharing the same data we've enjoyed a trouble free run with them. It would take a lot of convincing to get me back to running a proprietary NAS system. One thing to look out for is the ability to get access to the data on the drives should your proprietary hardware - whatever you choose - fail. The limitation with Netgear's product was the EXT3+ file system combined with the fact that the OS lives on the drives containing your data. With the Freenas/Nas4Free solution, just about any Intel box can resurrect your array within an hour. The OS lives on a USB stick. If there is any hint of trouble, the drives are safe. The ReadyNAS formatted started formatting a drive as a response to the other going offline after succumbing to the Seagate 7200.11 firmware brick-a-thon problem a few years back. It also corrupted the array on another occasion when something went wrong with the enclosure. I can't vouch for anything Qnap or Synology produce these days because until something changes, I'm out of the market.

  9. #9
    VladTepes's Avatar
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    Ta.

    I did look at one stage about building a machine running windows Server, with the appropriate drives etc and it cam in well above the cost of the Synology solution I mentioned. Then again, maybe I over-specced the machine I really don't know.

    What appeals to me about the Synology (and what it needs as I and to an even greater extent my fiance) are the supposed:
    - ease of set up &
    - ease of use / good GUI. (essential for the media streaming it would be used for)

    All the internet reviews I've read appear favourable.

    I've not heard any Synology 'downsides' though if there are any I'd like to know.
    It's not broken. It's "Carbon Neutral".


    gone


    1993 Defender 110 ute "Doris"
    1994 Range Rover Vogue LSE "The Luxo-Barge"
    1994 Defender 130 HCPU "Rolly"
    1996 Discovery 1

    current

    1995 Defender 130 HCPU and Suzuki GSX1400


  10. #10
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    I'm running a Seagate BlackArmour NAS system, 2 X 2TB discs in raid.
    Absolutely rock solid with good software and support from Seagate.
    All work is done via web browser login and the drives map as an extra drive in Win operating systems as native disks available via normal windows file browser as well.

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