a new home storage candidate?

January 9, 2007 under home storage, NAS, Windows Home Server

At this year’s CES, Microsoft announced that by sometime in the summer, Windows Home Server devices will be made available. You can find a video that gives an overview of Windows Home Server on Channel 10. Windows Home Server is a headless device with a client and web browser interface that functions similar to a NAS device. There is no actual RAID controller in a WHS, but RAID-like functionality apparently exists via simple data mirroring. Additional storage may be added via internal (ATA/SATA) or external hard drives (USB/Firewire). Thankfully, Microsoft opted to use SMB for file-sharing, so Linux and Mac clients can access data on a Windows Home Server. All of this is compelling to me and adds another home storage device that I must take into consideration.

To recap, here are the offerings I’m currently investigating:

Infrant ReadyNAS NV+

Buffalo TeraStation

Now I must consider Windows Home Server as well as a mystery NAS device Linksys announced at this year’s CES. So far, I’m leaning toward Infrant’s offering because I like the sound of their X-RAID functionality. Anybody out there able to help me in my decision?

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'nother noteworthy nas news nugget

October 25, 2006 under NAS

A couple of months ago, I mentioned my interest in NAS devices aimed at consumers; specifically offerings from Infrant and Buffalo. It now appears that Thermaltake, makers of many fine PC cases, power supplies and cooling fans, are offering a NAS device. I’m trying to round up as many reviews and comparisons as possible and now I have Thermaltake’s to add to the mix.

Pondering things like paint colours and furniture placement are probably common to anyone preparing to move into a new home, and Dena and I are no exception. Yet I’m also constantly thinking about where I am going to put my stuff. “Stuff”, in this context, refers to digital possessions such as music, data files and such. Up until a few years ago, most people didn’t need to concern themselves with places to store data in their house, but I think it makes sense to do so now. I have a lot of data and I constantly create/accumulate more everyday, and a house is (usually) bigger than an apartment. It would be nice to have access to that data in as many rooms as possible.

Some may think this whole NAS kick I’ve been on recently is overkill or is a for-geeks-only type of project, but I beg to differ. A NAS device now makes about as much sense as a washing machine and refrigerator, since I’m sure nobody would want to do laundry by hand and store their food in an ice chest anymore. If you have a digital camera, I bet you have pictures and videos stored on a desktop computer. Come everyone, gather around the computer in the office-cum-spare bedroom and watch the videos from lil’ Johnny’s first birthday party? Or if you have a laptop, you can huddle around that or click-click pass it around. And what happens if the hard drive in said desktop or laptop computer dies and all of your digital memories are lost? Did you back it up? Did you back it up to a recordable CD or DVD or perhaps an external hard drive? Did you back it up since you copied those latest pictures and videos over? Wouldn’t it be nice to be able to keep your important data somewhere that’s accessible on your home network and has the failsafe benefits of a RAID configuration? That’s the beauty of a NAS device. Sure, I could build a “server” to do the same thing, but a NAS device would accomplish the task more efficiently from a power consumption point-of-view. I’d love to keep my data files, music and movies on a NAS device so that it’s all accessible from any computer in the house, be it a desktop computer, a laptop computer or a media center PC. Gathering in the living room around a TV connected to a media center PC to watch home videos would be much nice than in the office-cum-spare bedroom. Thanks to Thermaltake, my decision on a NAS device would suit us just got more complicated, but in a good way 🙂

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na na na nas

May 31, 2006 under Computers, Hardware, NAS, Networking

Dena and I gearing up to buy a house at some point. Throwing money away on rent has become unbearable. As such, I’ve been visualizing a place to call home. I prefer to be clutter-free. I looked at the ugly rack of CDs and DVDs that we have, that occupy way more space than they should. I’m seeing NAS and media centre computers in our future. We have plenty of digital music in the form of MP3s and a whole lot of CDs taking up space. Also, managing a digital libary is insanely easier and more convenient than dealing with a physical one. Why not rip all of our CDs and add that to our existing digital library? Well, that would require a lot of disk space. Lots ‘n’ lots. Sure, hard drives are cheap, but they fail often because of said cheapness; I’d like a solid disaster recovery plan. Traditional backup media (CD-Rs, DVD-Rs, tape drives, external hard drives, remote storage, etc) are fine for backing up your documents and files, but not more something like a music library. RAID is better suited for a task like this. Here’s where a NAS device would come in handy.

Buffalo has a pricey NAS line for the home market called TeraStation Home Server. However, Infrant‘s ReadyNAS X6 really impresses me. Its proprietary X-RAID technology allows you to hotswap disks, even adding larger disks, to resize the array on-the-fly. So if 300GB disks are starting to fill up and 2TB disks become the norm…swap-y swap-y 😉

These RAID-ready NAS devices aimed at consumers are still a tad pricey for my tastes. You’re looking at over $600 just to get started, which is why I’d also consider something like FreeNAS. The OS is free and the hardware required wouldn’t be that expensive if I build it myself: a Celeron/Sempron CPU, a modest amount of RAM, RAID card and that’s pretty much it (minus the drives themselves, of course). Although, I’d preferably want a tiny case from Shuttle or whoever, and solid noise reduction/heat dispertion. Here’s where the consumer NAS devices shine, it would appear.

Either way, add media centre computers (Shuttle PCs or Mac Minis) in the rooms that count, and Bob’s your uncle.

Once that’s taken care of and the opportunity presents itself, I’ll surely look towards X10 and/or INSTEON gear. Writing code using the X10/INSTEON APIs to program an entire house would be wicked. If I walked in the door at the end of the day, the house would turn on the lights in the kitchen and play the most recent Radio 3 or TWiT podcast (stored on the NAS, of course) for me while I got supper started. On the other hand, if Dena were the first in the door, the house would do the same as it did for me, but play the latest Pearl Jam album (also on the NAS) or maybe turn on the TV and automatically flip to that CTV affiliate channel from Calgary so she can watch the day’s Dr. Phil episode that she missed while at work. Programming an entire house would be fun and keep me busy…and Dena thoroughly annoyed 😉

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