On 10 Dec 2007 10:00:24 GMT,
(E-Mail Removed) wrote:
>John <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>> On Sun, 9 Dec 2007 11:30:56 -0000, "Chris" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>>
>> >Any recommendations/experiences with NAS devices for a home network ?
>> >Looking for around 500GB - RAID type functionality not required
>> >My network is peer-to-peer, combination of wired 10/100 and wireless, and
>> >comprises a couple of laptops, one running XP Home, the other XP Pro, one
>> >desktop running XP Home and one desktop running W2K Pro
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> Qnap 109. Fanless, well-built and more functions than you can wave a
>> stick at. Built-in Twonky makes it a very good media server and
>> Slimserver can be installed if wanted - I uninstalled mine as it was
>> stopping the disk spinning down. It's in a different league to the
>> landisk NAS I had before.
>>
>> http://www.qnap.co.uk/
>>
>> Very pleased with mine and a fairly active forum at:
>>
>> http://forum.qnap.com/phpbb2/index.php
>>
>> although it seems to be off-line today.
>>
>How well does it work on a Linux network? E.g. how do you connect to
>it as a network drive from a Linux system?
It runs on an embedded Linux system using a 500mhz cpu and 128mb DDRII
memory. Although it has a web interface you can telnet into it or use
Putty to have command-line access. I can boot into Ubuntu but it is
not my main os - however it seems straightforward to access the 109
from that and I can browse files ok.
Network settings web control for TCP/IP, Microsoft networking, Apple
Networking, NFS, FTP, Web Server, DDNS, MySQL server etc. The 109 pro
comes with NFS and active directory support but my non-pro came with
these functions (I think this was a mistake - many others found the
same around the same time so looks as if a batch got through wrongly
boxed). There are also remote replication and incremental back-up
functions plus a pseudo raid 1 mirroring for plugged in usb or esata
drives.
All the features are described for each line at qnap.co.uk
John