NAS box needed - but which one?

chudley

New member
I have been looking around for a bit now trying to determine which is the best to buy.

I am after it so that I can stream films and music wirelessly to watch and listen to on TV. I am after at least 500gb in size and price is not too important.

has anyone got experience of them and which ones are best?

I already have a 500gb media player.
 
Have a look at the netgear SC101T, Ive got one sat here boxed Im not using.

If you interested Ill make a FS thread.
 
name='nathan' said:
does the size of it matter? i'd prob build a mini pc or something.

I went down this road this last weekend.

What a total waste of my time.

If u do consider doing a sort of pc with linux/unix nas software, check all the kit ur gonna use in it. I found that if ur kit is too good, u run into problem after problem.

If u got an AMD k7 w/512m or P3/4 or something - definitely try it out.
 
got a spare pc I could possibly use as it is past its sell by date. Gonna google NAS software now, do you know of any particular good ones Rast?

I have just read this today on a link to a news item from the times of all places and was totally out of the blue as I was catching up on news.

Tversity anyone ever used it? free version lets you stream from your PC apparently.
 
FreeNas is "meant" to be good. Didn't like my mobos ACPI. The webgui looks nice and easy to configure. Just a shame my nic kept going to sleep. Potentially u can install it on a bootable usb flash drive and it'd run from it into memory. 512m is loads. Wants to work with UFS filesystem perferably, but u can add other ready formatted drives (at ur own risk - it says).

Openfiler is "meant" to be good. The configuration simply works or doesn't. Assigning areas, disks, users, groups configurable from the webgui. .. And then perhaps it'll do it properly.

To be fair to both of these, they want older, even designed for older kit.

U should try em both. Use a cdrw to burn the images.

In this day'n'age, and with such easy frontends on the likes of buffalo drives, lacie, the free options seem overly complicated for what should be a simple process. Even tho they're upd8d regularly.

Tried NasLite too, which seemed to install ok, then I noticed only 4 drives. Which aint no good for what I'm doing.
 
Cheers Rast , found a couple of other possible solutions - media tomb if i decide to go linux, and there are quite a few good suggestions on avforums.

you also mentioned buffalo and lacie, they are some of the out of the box solutions i am considering, but i think i prefer to build my own first. :rolleyes:

As for age, the system i just looked at the mb battery is dead lol, so that should be old enough.

Just need to grab a small type case from somewhere as it is in a huge heavy old HP case.
 
So, have you decided yet?

Yes, I know, I'm digging up an old thread, but this is one of my favourite topics, so I might actually be able to help.

First of all, I think budget and time are two of the most important issues. If he wants to build his own box but hasn't got the time, he'll probably be better off going off-the-shelf; and budget boundaries might tell us how many disks he might have be able to have. single and dual-disk NASes are rather cheap...

That being said, the Mediasmart series from HP seems to be a great starting point. From one to four disks (BYOD for at least the third and fourth ones on some models, and there is actually a single-disk, non-upgradeable entry-level model, too), WHS (which I use and absolutely recommend, the backup, duplication and Drive Extender capabilities are just great), and a nifty little package with quite a punch in the "SOHO-oriented" models (the only real differences are the dual core 2.5GHz CPU and the model name, plus hot-plug on the eSATA port, if I recall it correctly).

For about the same price as a Mediasmart, but much bigger, you can build a new WHS box, with up to 15 HDD bays (though hot-swap will not be available), and even more, but when you get that big price will rear its ugly head with full force.

Hope this helps.

Cheers.

Miguel
 
Well I have been running a Drobo for awhile now and I love it, easily the best NAS out there, Miguel mentioned it already but hp has the HP MediaSmart Server LX195 which is also really nice and i'm thinking its also cheaper then the drobo so its a good solution.
 
Well, what I have so far is Freenas booting from USB. Thats how far I got before not having time to continue with this- had a few other things to do first and still have more to do before I can get back to it.

I just need to get my head into the setup guides etc and I think once I start using it things will become more clear, but at the moment it looks too much for me to get on with as I have not got the time.

Even more frustrating as I believe I am close to having it sorted :) Time will tell.

Cheers for all the input so far guys and I hope what others have wrote has been helpful to others too.
 
Back
Top