New to NAS, have been doing a lot of research on this page and others and I think I should be able to keep up. Since I haven't actually started to build my network yet (moving in august) I tend to have a lot of questions about the physical nuts and bolts. I know that the NAS has plenty of snazzy features that I want to use but I want to know the physical folder layout, file destination.
The general layout is a 4br apartment for me and 3 friends near my university with one central location near the living room where the router, modem, nas and xbox 360 are, so those are all hard wired together. Then there will be 4 laptops and a few mobile devices that are wirelessly connected (not my apt, unable to wire it myself). My goal is to give myself a 2x 1tb drive RAID 1 setting to save personal files and media files which would be a safe place for others to store their multimedia and sort of pool together all of our collective music and movies so that we all have access to more and when we all go our separate ways everyone can take the newly formed whole joint multimedia library with them.
Specific question now:
I have a very neat manner about me and like to plan things out ahead of time so that when I equip I can spend a day getting everything set up right.
I know I want to give every user about 50gb of personal file space on the NAS to keep things safely backed up that they dont want to share with everyone one else on the network.
I want the folder layout of my NAS to be very clean and un cluttered, a few main folders leading to as many subfolders as people want. It seems that the NASes like to put folders for every module addon that they have (itunes server, ftp, DLNA stream, etc). When I build the movie library to be streamed to the comps and XBOX 360, do all the files need to be saved in the premade folder built around the UPnP/DLNA server? Same for iTunes streaming, do I save the content just on a folder that I name music or do I save it in the folder that is created as part of the specific server function of the NAS? Do I save in both places?
I'm trying to be as efficient as possible to avoid have a file saved two times on the NAS. When a media file needs to be moved from computer to NAS, what folder would I want to put it in in order to have it streamable. (maybe this should have been the question from the beginning and I could have save all the other typing)
That leads me to a question about personal space on the hard drive for each person. I imagine (correct me where I'm wrong please) the NAS home directory would have 5 folders: Person A, B, C, D and Shared. The NAS would be mapped as X: drive for example on my computer which I assume would lead to the root with the 5 folders. When user D tries to click on use C's folder (I understand rights are assigned from the NAS) will he be prompted for a user name and password?
Is it possible to map the drives as X: for common and Z: for personal on each person's individual computer to make it easier for them to save files to and know that one is theirs and protected while the other is shared or in order to map a drive to you have to have a physically different drive?
I hope I don't sound like a nut, but as I hope you may see, I understand the functions of the NAS (streaming, ftp, itunes, etc) but I don't understand the physical implementation of each. I am anxious for any replies, thanks.
The general layout is a 4br apartment for me and 3 friends near my university with one central location near the living room where the router, modem, nas and xbox 360 are, so those are all hard wired together. Then there will be 4 laptops and a few mobile devices that are wirelessly connected (not my apt, unable to wire it myself). My goal is to give myself a 2x 1tb drive RAID 1 setting to save personal files and media files which would be a safe place for others to store their multimedia and sort of pool together all of our collective music and movies so that we all have access to more and when we all go our separate ways everyone can take the newly formed whole joint multimedia library with them.
Specific question now:
I have a very neat manner about me and like to plan things out ahead of time so that when I equip I can spend a day getting everything set up right.
I know I want to give every user about 50gb of personal file space on the NAS to keep things safely backed up that they dont want to share with everyone one else on the network.
I want the folder layout of my NAS to be very clean and un cluttered, a few main folders leading to as many subfolders as people want. It seems that the NASes like to put folders for every module addon that they have (itunes server, ftp, DLNA stream, etc). When I build the movie library to be streamed to the comps and XBOX 360, do all the files need to be saved in the premade folder built around the UPnP/DLNA server? Same for iTunes streaming, do I save the content just on a folder that I name music or do I save it in the folder that is created as part of the specific server function of the NAS? Do I save in both places?
I'm trying to be as efficient as possible to avoid have a file saved two times on the NAS. When a media file needs to be moved from computer to NAS, what folder would I want to put it in in order to have it streamable. (maybe this should have been the question from the beginning and I could have save all the other typing)
That leads me to a question about personal space on the hard drive for each person. I imagine (correct me where I'm wrong please) the NAS home directory would have 5 folders: Person A, B, C, D and Shared. The NAS would be mapped as X: drive for example on my computer which I assume would lead to the root with the 5 folders. When user D tries to click on use C's folder (I understand rights are assigned from the NAS) will he be prompted for a user name and password?
Is it possible to map the drives as X: for common and Z: for personal on each person's individual computer to make it easier for them to save files to and know that one is theirs and protected while the other is shared or in order to map a drive to you have to have a physically different drive?
I hope I don't sound like a nut, but as I hope you may see, I understand the functions of the NAS (streaming, ftp, itunes, etc) but I don't understand the physical implementation of each. I am anxious for any replies, thanks.