I’ve been contemplating the purchase of an NAS for several months and would appreciate some advice and guidance. I've read the sticky and have looked at the reviews, but am a little overwhelmed by the amount of information on the website.
Presently, my home has 3 computers. The main computer is wired directly to my router (D-Link Dir 655). It is a six-month old computer that uses XP-Home. I use that computer for writing, video editing, and some software development. It has 3 hard drives with roughly a tetrabyte of storage.
The second computer is a desktop pc that uses XP-Home and is connected wirelessly. It has 3 hard drives with roughly ¾ tetrabytes of storage. That computer is used mostly for photo editing by my wife who has a fairly large photo collection.
The third is a laptop, mostly used for writing, PowerPoint presentations, and e-mail when I am on the road. It uses XP-Home.
I have a home-built server which uses Openfiler on a computer that is roughly 8 years old. I cobbled that together – mostly by trial and error – and while it works, I don’t trust it completely and have not been able to successfully add additional drives to it. It currently has about 300 megabytes of storage and is wired directly to the router. We also have hard-drives connected to our desktops via USB that are used for back-ups.
I’d like a NAS system that gives me the ability to add hard drives as my needs for storage increase. Even though I spend a considerable amount of time on the road, I don’t have a need to access my files remotely (a thumb drive suffices for that). When I’m home, I’d like to be able to back up my work files incrementally. I also want a place to back up video files which are also backed up on DVD’s. My wife wants to incrementally back up the photo files that she uses. She also backs up her photo files on CDs or DVDs and probably will continue that practice. We don’t have any particular need to play audio files or view photo or video files from the server, although that might be a good option to have for the future. And I don’t think that we need a RAID system, given that we back up our files on CD’s or DVD’s.
I’d like the ability to put the device in sleeper mode and keep energy costs to a minimum. While I’m fairly good with computers, I prefer something that is simple to administer.
I like what I’ve read about the latest version of the HP Media Smart server and would like some feedback as to whether I might be better off with one of the other products on the market. The price point for the HP Server is about right, but I would be willing to spend more if the arguments in support of other products were convincing enough.
Presently, my home has 3 computers. The main computer is wired directly to my router (D-Link Dir 655). It is a six-month old computer that uses XP-Home. I use that computer for writing, video editing, and some software development. It has 3 hard drives with roughly a tetrabyte of storage.
The second computer is a desktop pc that uses XP-Home and is connected wirelessly. It has 3 hard drives with roughly ¾ tetrabytes of storage. That computer is used mostly for photo editing by my wife who has a fairly large photo collection.
The third is a laptop, mostly used for writing, PowerPoint presentations, and e-mail when I am on the road. It uses XP-Home.
I have a home-built server which uses Openfiler on a computer that is roughly 8 years old. I cobbled that together – mostly by trial and error – and while it works, I don’t trust it completely and have not been able to successfully add additional drives to it. It currently has about 300 megabytes of storage and is wired directly to the router. We also have hard-drives connected to our desktops via USB that are used for back-ups.
I’d like a NAS system that gives me the ability to add hard drives as my needs for storage increase. Even though I spend a considerable amount of time on the road, I don’t have a need to access my files remotely (a thumb drive suffices for that). When I’m home, I’d like to be able to back up my work files incrementally. I also want a place to back up video files which are also backed up on DVD’s. My wife wants to incrementally back up the photo files that she uses. She also backs up her photo files on CDs or DVDs and probably will continue that practice. We don’t have any particular need to play audio files or view photo or video files from the server, although that might be a good option to have for the future. And I don’t think that we need a RAID system, given that we back up our files on CD’s or DVD’s.
I’d like the ability to put the device in sleeper mode and keep energy costs to a minimum. While I’m fairly good with computers, I prefer something that is simple to administer.
I like what I’ve read about the latest version of the HP Media Smart server and would like some feedback as to whether I might be better off with one of the other products on the market. The price point for the HP Server is about right, but I would be willing to spend more if the arguments in support of other products were convincing enough.