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Asus Eee Box as NAS?

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ManOKonstantSoro

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Asus has just announced their Eee Box, powered by a 1.6 GHz Atom processor, 2-GB of RAM, 250-GB of storage, 1-Gbps ethernet, 20-W power draw, and Linux operating system. I wonder if/how well one of these would work as a simple file server, in the same vein as "home-built" PC file servers?
 
Good question. Maybe once they start shipping we can take a look at it.
 
Asus has just announced their Eee Box, powered by a 1.6 GHz Atom processor, 2-GB of RAM, 250-GB of storage, 1-Gbps ethernet, 20-W power draw, and Linux operating system. I wonder if/how well one of these would work as a simple file server, in the same vein as "home-built" PC file servers?

Well, unless you're hooking up your drives via USB, I would have to say "not very". It's not expandable enough to really use it as a serious NAS - and it's pretty pricey at $299. For $299, you could get the Intel Atom motherboard ($80), 2GB of generic RAM ($25), and an ASUS TM-210 case ($55) with a 300W 80plus power supply, which would leave you $150 or so for hard drives. That's at least two 500GB hard drives. I admit, it's not in the same power-draw category as the Eee Box (something I struggled with myself when built my NAS), but it's significantly more expandable, and you'd probably want to spend $10 for a gigabit ethernet card. But if you do build one, I'd be interested in knowing how it turns out for you. Michael Graves just did an article in a similar vein with a T5700, and essentially, the Eee Box is an updated T5700 without a CD-ROM drive, and a smaller power draw...
 
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With two SATA connectors, the Intel Atom motherboard will support only RAID 1.

Performance will be limited by on-board 10/100 NIC and adding a gigabit NIC will be limited by PCI, not PCI-e.

Might still be worth a look, since everyone is wondering what an Atom-based NAS will do.
 
With two SATA connectors, the Intel Atom motherboard will support only RAID 1.

Performance will be limited by on-board 10/100 NIC and adding a gigabit NIC will be limited by PCI, not PCI-e.

Might still be worth a look, since everyone is wondering what an Atom-based NAS will do.

Indeed I am curious. I'm thinking about building a second NAS with that board and a gigabit NIC.

By the way, there's also a PATA connector on there. Gets you up to four drives, though admittedly there will be a performance difference.
 
Does the Intel ICH7 let you mix SATA and PATA drives for RAID?
 

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