** Populated NAS Solutions - Full Review Inside! **

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rjk

rjk

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Hi Guys

Recently we have joined forced with our main NAS supplier to offer a comprehensive range of pre-filled NAS units from QNAP and Synology, the market leaders in home and enterprise grade storage.

View the expanding range here

A NAS is an ideal replacement for a server especially in a small business scenario where low power consumption, reliability, redundancy and a small unit footprint are important.

In simple terms, these units come pre-filled with drives, ready to use with full technical support from our supplier. When an order is placed, the unit is shipped to you as soon as possible, pre configured and ready for you to set up at your home or business.

We also offer extended warranties for our NAS solutions that are provided directly with the supplier, if a drive dies, it is easily replaced. The main NAS unit is also covered under comprehensive warranty for peace of mind.

Choosing a NAS has never been so easy. At the moment, we have a small range on offer which focusses on quite high end units, throughout the week you will see additions to the range with the more affordable units that are aimed at home users.

All of our populated NAS solutions are shipped with Hitachi Deskstar drives, the brand of drives may be subject to change due to availability but the specification would remain the same high standard.

Today, I will be reviewing a business orientated solution, the QNAP TS-439 Pro II+ 4TB Solution. This unit has been with us on loan for a few days to see exactly what it can do, and it certainly doesn't disappoint.

check out the spec sheet of the NAS for a full run-down of its capabilities.
[remember that nearly all QNAP and Synology units we sell offer a lot of these features too]



The TS-439 Pro II+ is a brilliant all rounder, for business it gives excellent performance thanks to its impressive Intel Atom CPU which uses hyper threading to boost performance alongside a generous amount of memory.

The TS-439 Pro II+ comes in a large box which tells you all about the features it has, as you would expect, the box is quite boring.

Inside the box you find a full setup sheet designed specifically for this product. The sheet is written by the supplier rather than the manufacturer and includes the following:
  • support contact details
  • setup information
  • troubleshooting tips
  • model specific tips
  • model specific information

All of this information is especially useful, especially for the first time setup. However, the setup is a doddle anyway.

Here are some snaps of the product:
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After around an hour of drooling over the quality of the unit, we decided to get it plugged into the OcUK network and set up.

Setting up this unit could not be simpler, the installation sheet accompanying the NAS is very detailed and really holds your hand through each stage. The chances of getting it wrong are slim.

In a nutshell, all that we had to do was plug the unit in and run a network cable from the back of the NAS to the switch that runs Gibbo, Nath, and my computers. it was that easy.

As soon as the NAS was switched on, it booted up and was ready for initial setup.

Now, you can locate the NAS over the network by searching for it in windows then accessing the IP via a browser, but I like the QNAP Finder software. This dedicated application allows you to find the NAS, easily map network drives as well as assign passwords and IP addresses and perform FW updates.

After launching QNAP finder, the NAS shows up straight away with all of its details. Clicking on the NAS details brings up your default browser with the NAS control panel.

You start by setting the NAS up to meet your specific requirements:
setup1.jpg


after entering basic details, you get to enable the features that really make the NAS useful:
setup5.jpg


The next step is setting the RAID array:
setup6raidoptions.jpg


The setup tells you how each RAID option works and explains the benefits to you.
setup6.jpg


you get to check all your options before you press install, install takes around 20 seconds :p
setupfinish.jpg


The RAID array builds itself in the background whilst you continue to explore the NAS control panel which is really neat. You can then assign users, map network drives, configuration of the server is intuitive and easy.

with the NAS on the network, the whole office logged into the unit to get a feel for it and check out the interface. There were a lot of impressed faces

One of the features I use at home on my older QNAP NAS is the Download Station which allows you to use the NAS to perform unattended downloads without the need for a PC. the download station software is easy to use and supports multiple download clients.
DownloadStation.jpg



In addition to the already feature rich software, the QNAP allows you to download and install applications that expand its usefulness called QPKGs
QPKGs.jpg


To check the transfer performance, I decided to do a backup of some games and throw them onto the NAS.
To say that this was quick would be a massive understatement.
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In summary, I am very impressed with the unit. It provides server level file storage performance for a fraction of the cost. as a basic server, it excels. The unit is quiet and looks brilliant. The built in screen gives you all the info you need at the touch of a button as well.

I could go on about each feature that these units have individually but it would take me an age.

put simply, if you have a small business or want epic amounts of fast, secure network storage, this is the first place you need to be looking.
 
£1k for 4TB :O for that I'd want a lot more than a atom mobo, some basic raid controller and a handful of disks that aren't selling on their own... and it doesn't even look like you can have more than one raid config (so no two RAID 1 x 2, or RAID 0 and RAID 1 etc..).

My biggest concern is you suggest its secure. I don't see anything to suggest it is and the web configuration is HTTP so any passwords are being sent in plain text.

So, Expensive, limited options, not that fast and expensive.
 
£1k for 4TB :O for that I'd want a lot more than a atom mobo, some basic raid controller and a handful of disks that aren't selling on their own... and it doesn't even look like you can have more than one raid config (so no two RAID 1 x 2, or RAID 0 and RAID 1 etc..).

My biggest concern is you suggest its secure. I don't see anything to suggest it is and the web configuration is HTTP so any passwords are being sent in plain text.

So, Expensive, limited options, not that fast and expensive.
Think it is called sales pitch ;)
 
£1k for 4TB :O for that I'd want a lot more than a atom mobo, some basic raid controller and a handful of disks that aren't selling on their own... and it doesn't even look like you can have more than one raid config (so no two RAID 1 x 2, or RAID 0 and RAID 1 etc..).

My biggest concern is you suggest its secure. I don't see anything to suggest it is and the web configuration is HTTP so any passwords are being sent in plain text.

So, Expensive, limited options, not that fast and expensive.

Hi ecksmen

the cost of the NAS is overly inflated at the moment as it contains mech hdds which I am sure you already know are in restraint at the moment.

obviously, this would be a more attractive proposal when hdd pricing settles down to its usual level.

I am unsure how you think that the disks are not selling on their own? Hitachi are one of the leading brands of storage drives on the market and the model used in this unit are very popular. Is the statement that they 'aren't selling on their own' based on factual evidence such as sales figures or just personal opinion?

the password screens have SSL encryption but are also backed up behind your network, so security of your network is an important factor too.

I am not suggesting that a NAS unit like this would suit everyone and it is certainly aimed at businesses rather than home users as pointed out in the OP

but there is clearly room for devices like this in the market and the demand for them is growing daily.

hope that answers your questions :)
 
Hi ecksmen

the cost of the NAS is overly inflated at the moment as it contains mech hdds which I am sure you already know are in restraint at the moment.

obviously, this would be a more attractive proposal when hdd pricing settles down to its usual level.

I am unsure how you think that the disks are not selling on their own? Hitachi are one of the leading brands of storage drives on the market and the model used in this unit are very popular. Is the statement that they 'aren't selling on their own' based on factual evidence such as sales figures or just personal opinion?

the password screens have SSL encryption but are also backed up behind your network, so security of your network is an important factor too.

I am not suggesting that a NAS unit like this would suit everyone and it is certainly aimed at businesses rather than home users as pointed out in the OP

but there is clearly room for devices like this in the market and the demand for them is growing daily.

hope that answers your questions :)

Of course I don't have access to hdd sales figures, who does? I'm sure hitachi or any of the other manufacturers sell 1TB and lower capacities in droves to system manufacturers where capacity isn't an issue (work stations, portable usb drives etc...). However, I bet up until recently OCuKs sales of OEM single disks wouldn't have been in favour of 1TB over bigger variants. Either way this point is a throw away comment.

What I do not understand is why anyone would want a fully populated NAS with disks that are offer half the capacity of another solution.

You're welcome to view differently, but I doubt you'll be selling many if any, regardless of who you think will buy them. I wouldn't even consider this a SOHO solution.

Perhaps your review rather than showing a few screenshots of a webgui that would be in the manual and instead pulled some disks and went through some proper tests such as rebuilding the array, system alerting for failed disks and permission integration such as LDAP, hell even basic network teaming for increased performance you may have had some more interest.

Right now, its a low capacity over expensive NAS regardless of how you want to paint it.

Edit -

iSCSI targeting - this is the sort of thing you should be talking about - not "heres 4TB of NAS for £1k"
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