I think 220J should be good enough if video trancoding is not needed.I am also looking into adding a NAS setup. Initially I explored a few RPi solutions such as OMV. Right now I'm more inclined towards a one stop solution from Synology. Can someone explain to me the benefits of choosing DS220+ over something cheaper like the DS220j if I am not looking into video transcoding?
Are you still running it? How is the performance?I have a older synology DS212, if you decide to look at synology type nas
Not being used anymore. Looks like DSM 6.2.4 is the version its last supported version for x12 series. DSM 7 was released just couple of months back, so 6.2.4 will still get security updates for some more time.Are you still running it? How is the performance?
Which version of Synology DS does it have?
Thank you!I have a QNAP NAS. Very happy with the performance, stability and features.
My earlier NAS was Buffalo, and that was really slow.
Thisis what I have :
QNAP TS-431P-1GB 4-Bay Network Attached Storage : Amazon.in: Computers & Accessories
QNAP TS-431P-1GB 4-Bay Network Attached Storage : Amazon.in: Computers & Accessorieswww.amazon.in
I guess old model now.
Check out their current models
Thanks. I read some people managed to upgrade to D7 on 212.Not being used anymore. Looks like DSM 6.2.4 is the version its last supported version for x12 series. DSM 7 was released just couple of months back, so 6.2.4 will still get security updates for some more time.
If you are looking to use a NAS as simple file server & back up, 212 should be good enough. It does some level of transcoding but I never used it for the purpose. I use it for file storage, syncing phones & laptops, local/home cloud & music server. Photo & video storage. I have upgraded to 218+, it was a impulse buy nothing lacking in 212 for my purpose.
Yes I know but I didn't want to confirm without first hand experience.Thanks. I read some people managed to upgrade to D7 on 212.
How is the power consumption?I dont prefer these commercial solutions. Instead, i went with Fractal Design Case which can house multiple drives clubbed with a Supermicro motherboard.
Hi There. Can you share some write-up link relating to this? I have a Intel NUC lying unused for a while and would want to re-purpose it to some better use - NAS, Pi-hole or smart DNS something like that.If you are looking for something in the budget, TrueNas on Intel NUC, and you have got yourself an enterprise-grade solution.
Download the FreeNAS image from the link below and boot the NUC from that image via a USB drive. The installation wizard is pretty self-explanatory. Be informed; you need a min of 8GB of RAM before the wizard allows you to install it. It's super stable from my experience and offers tons of Customization/Plugins like Plex, Nextcloud to extend the built-in NAS services.Hi There. Can you share some write-up link relating to this? I have a Intel NUC lying unused for a while and would want to re-purpose it to some better use - NAS, Pi-hole or smart DNS something like that.
Also, What is your experience using a similar setup?
I can connect all my External HDD to the NUC and it could do that automatic mapping and access right?Download the FreeNAS image from the link below and boot the NUC from that image via a USB drive. The installation wizard is pretty self-explanatory. Be informed; you need a min of 8GB of RAM before the wizard allows you to install it. It's super stable from my experience and offers tons of Customization/Plugins like Plex, Nextcloud to extend the built-in NAS services.
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Download TrueNAS CORE - Completely Free NAS OS
Download TrueNAS CORE and discover why it's the world's #1 Open Source storage operating system.www.freenas.org