lbrumbaugh
New Around Here
Long story short, a couple of friends have a Synology DS410 and a DS411j. They love the interface on the boxes and the functionality of them. I'm in the market for a NAS, and after talking to them had seriously considered picking up a DS411. The problem now is that I've done too much research
After reading the various forums and articles (like How to Pick a NAS (shortened and long version)) I now am in a head spin. I want a few of the following:
-Simply file sharing (dlna)
-App support (mainly Plex to stream/transcode to a Roku frontend)
-Possible bittorrenting
-Backups of workstations
-USB3/Esata port for external drive backup (Or as Stevech says, I might just want to do a backup to an internal drive/volume)
So as far as I can tell, both QNAP and Synology does all of those things. What's really started to get under my skin is that it seems that all the QNAP NAS's have dual NIC's in them and the Synology one's do not. While granted, I might not ever need them, it seems that if you're doing backups and you want always on data access, it just makes sense to have that redundant as well.
So to get to my point, is Synology that great of software that it supersedes hardware? I also come to the point that hardware can hardly ever be upgraded, while software you can. So, do people really believe that the Synology is everything and a bag of chips and that I should just suck it up.
I've also read that some people have installed the Synology OS ontop of QNAP. Can anyone comment on that at all?
Thanks for the thoughts/opinions.

-Simply file sharing (dlna)
-App support (mainly Plex to stream/transcode to a Roku frontend)
-Possible bittorrenting
-Backups of workstations
-USB3/Esata port for external drive backup (Or as Stevech says, I might just want to do a backup to an internal drive/volume)
So as far as I can tell, both QNAP and Synology does all of those things. What's really started to get under my skin is that it seems that all the QNAP NAS's have dual NIC's in them and the Synology one's do not. While granted, I might not ever need them, it seems that if you're doing backups and you want always on data access, it just makes sense to have that redundant as well.
So to get to my point, is Synology that great of software that it supersedes hardware? I also come to the point that hardware can hardly ever be upgraded, while software you can. So, do people really believe that the Synology is everything and a bag of chips and that I should just suck it up.
I've also read that some people have installed the Synology OS ontop of QNAP. Can anyone comment on that at all?
Thanks for the thoughts/opinions.