ThatAnonymousGuy
New Around Here
Looking to buy a NAS setup for an office hooked up to five computers. Concerned that one computer will crash and data will be lost. Want to do a RAID 5 setup with 1TB drives. Do not want to build a server. Rather spend the extra money on something pre-built and diskless. Network runs on Gigabit Ethernet.
The only primary needs are capacity, decent speed, and ease of use. We want to use the device to archive old data and keep a backup of current data. Sometimes we transfer large amounts of data but other times it's not too much. Dealing with high resolution images, microsoft suite files, adobe suite files and other file formats.
It seems like every review I read on Newegg says the particular NAS is bad (like no tech support, RAID array dropping ever time, etc.) I know Newegg can only be taken with a grain of salt, but I would like to have confidence from folks that know a lot about this subject that I am making an informed purchase.
Don't really have a price range. I'd rather keep options open. Sometimes paying more can get you better hardware, or is this not the case for NAS devices?
Just a side question about hard drives. Do I need RAID specific drives like WD RE3 drives or would any regular drive do?
Please advise. Thanks in advance.
The only primary needs are capacity, decent speed, and ease of use. We want to use the device to archive old data and keep a backup of current data. Sometimes we transfer large amounts of data but other times it's not too much. Dealing with high resolution images, microsoft suite files, adobe suite files and other file formats.
It seems like every review I read on Newegg says the particular NAS is bad (like no tech support, RAID array dropping ever time, etc.) I know Newegg can only be taken with a grain of salt, but I would like to have confidence from folks that know a lot about this subject that I am making an informed purchase.
Don't really have a price range. I'd rather keep options open. Sometimes paying more can get you better hardware, or is this not the case for NAS devices?
Just a side question about hard drives. Do I need RAID specific drives like WD RE3 drives or would any regular drive do?
Please advise. Thanks in advance.