Why are these little NAS so expensive? They contain about £15 worth of components and about £10 worth of plastics even if you factor in a 5x cost factor that is still £125.
This one doesn't even include a hard disk!
Fail: because consumer electronics need not be this expensive.
By Simon DickPosted Monday 3rd August 2009 09:41 GMT
I have one of these, despite the review not mentioning it, it does come complete with support for Macs and Linux, including NFS and AFP, also you have SSH access to the Linux install running the device for any really in depth tweaking/modifications you want to try
By Anonymous CowardPosted Monday 3rd August 2009 10:28 GMT
These aren't simply hard drives connected to a network adapter. The NAS is a small computer. It can run applications (like SABNZBD+) and has a variant of Linux installed. You need to see this more as an alternative to a home server - host files privately and publically, download torrents and usenet stuff. Where 2 years ago you'd need a PC to do this, now you can get an embedded box to serve that purpose.
Personally I'd buy one of the £150 Linux Intel Atom boxes now available (Acer Aspire Revo) and plug in an E-Sata drive, but this certainly has considerably more than £15 of parts in it.
Atom is the way forward with NAS. Low power, low heat, but powerful enough to make a decent little home server and not need a monster noisy power supply sucking in dust 24/7 that will go bang (as my home build PC servers frequently do!).
Sadly Qnap's Atom versions (e.g. TS-239) are even more expensive! There are cheaper alternatives.
@Bob H - These typically have a proper PC motherboard (in small form factor), processor, memory (typically 1GB these days), often a RAID card/chip, GB network adapter (or two, maybe with failover, load balancing, etc in some cases), a few peripheral ports, support for a UPS, (usually) hot swap drive bays, and a power supply on top. They're enough to make a good home server running streaming servers, web, email, etc. And then the branded ones come with all the software and packages preinstalled with easy to use interface. Even considering the mark up, there's a lot more than £15 of parts in there, and considerably more in value.
By Matt BryantPosted Monday 3rd August 2009 12:27 GMT
The upside is that for the price you get a very competent NAS solution with which you will have to do little tinkering, and is an almost plug'n'play solution for the average user. However, if you have the tech knowledge to tinker and want to play with stuff like FreeNAS or other Linux builds, you can go get an old PC or server off eBay for £50 and have a more useful (it can double as a more effective print, file and webserver) and expandable tool, and with components that can be repaired or upgraded at will, whereas one of these off-the-shelf NAS units are very hard to repair if they go wrong (believe me, I've tried!). Some buyers would never consider building their own NAS, so for them these commercial solutions are great. For others they are just too constrained and pricey compared to a homebuild.
I've had a 209 since November last year and in the time up to now I've only just begun to realise what it can do.
Initially I just wanted a mirrored NAS that I could store all my movies and music on after having lost 300GB worth in a hard disk crash, but soon after I realised it could:
- Stream via uPnP via built in Twonky Server
- Act as an iTunes server
- host an FTP server accessible over the internet for uploading and downloading files.
- Same as above over HTTP
- Design and Host my website, forum and blog.
- Forward IP information to a 3rd party DNS company
- Stream music through a web interface over the internet
- Host an Email server
- Host 2 printers and share them over the network
- Act as DHCP server for the network
- Connect to IP cameras on the network and act as a server for them
- backup to a USB drive via a one touch button (slow as hell for an initial load but can properly sync rather than wipe and reload everything on the target drive).
- Act as a TimeMachine backup drive (with a bit of tweaking)
- Act as a torrent and HTTP/FTP download server.
- Join the Mule file sharing network
And I'm sure there's more I'm leaving out, I've used quite a few of these features but not all of them. Sure, there are some I will likely never use but I doubt anyone will manage to use ALL of the above.
And the QNAP team are constantly pushing out updates with new features, and the QPKG facility allows third party software to be installed and accessed via the web interface.
I'm more than satisfied with my decision to buy the 209, even though transfer speeds aren't that great. If the 219 addresses these issues then I would definitely recommend it to anyone looking for a good all round NAS product.
By Return To SenderPosted Wednesday 5th August 2009 14:32 GMT
"Sure you can put together a small pc cheaper and use it as server, but in the end I bought a QNAP NAS and am happy with it:"
And I'm just about to do the same. Been considering a NAS box for while, this is the first one I've seen that ticks all the boxes for me.
I've actually got most of the services running on a couple (or three) PCs under Linux already. However, our sixth power cut in the last month has highlighted how much use the whole family makes of the servers, not just yours truly. So one of these, a small UPS, a couple of 1TB drives that I've already got (had been planning to upgrade a server anyway) and that should be the last time I have to talk the wife through restarting the servers. And I get my playpen servers back!
By MarkOnePosted Wednesday 5th August 2009 14:37 GMT
The alternative of course is to spin your own NAS using a SheevaPlug. 1.2Ghz ARM based Kirkwood processor, 512MB RAM, 512MB Flash, SDCard, USB2, 1Gb Ethernet. $99 Runs Ubuntu from flash, with plenty of room for your own stuff, stick a Western Digital MyBook Mirror on the USB port and bobs yer uncle so they say..
This what I have done, and I get the best of both worlds, near NAS formfactor, NAS power consumption, ultimate configurability and a enough resources to do the most CPU intensive tasks (like transcodiing on TwonkyMedia).
Comments on: Qnap TS-219P Turbo Nas
Price... #
By Bob H Posted Monday 3rd August 2009 08:49 GMT
Why only windows? #
By Paul Crawford Posted Monday 3rd August 2009 09:21 GMT
Windows #
By Simon Dick Posted Monday 3rd August 2009 09:41 GMT
@Bob H #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Monday 3rd August 2009 10:28 GMT
Atom Atom Atom #
By Bod Posted Monday 3rd August 2009 12:15 GMT
RE: @Bob H #
By Matt Bryant Posted Monday 3rd August 2009 12:27 GMT
@Paul Crawford #
By Brian 6 Posted Monday 3rd August 2009 13:23 GMT
Can you compare it to FSG-3 #
By Robert Forsyth Posted Monday 3rd August 2009 17:29 GMT
Reasons I went for a QNAP NAS and not a PC as server #
By Peter D'Hoye Posted Tuesday 4th August 2009 09:39 GMT
Yeah but look at all it can do.... #
By MattyB Posted Tuesday 4th August 2009 09:46 GMT
not pretty? #
By Bronek Kozicki Posted Tuesday 4th August 2009 20:00 GMT
@Peter D'Hoye #
By Return To Sender Posted Wednesday 5th August 2009 14:32 GMT
@MattyB #
By MarkOne Posted Wednesday 5th August 2009 14:37 GMT