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Are you ready to upgrade
to a NAS?
Posted: 01 Nov 2009 02:53 AM PST
Network Attached Storage (NAS) is becoming an essential part
of small-scale networks like a home network. With all of the
movies and music you have downloaded, there should be a robust
and scalable way to share and store them on your home network
and this is what a NAS product provides.
Think of it as a hard drive for your network rather than
a hard drive for just one computer. With Network
Attached Storage, multiple computers (even those connected
remotely via the internet), printers, or TVs can access the
same shared files.

Most NAS devices tend to be very easy to
set up, and some even provide Internet Connection Sharing,
wireless connectivity, an email server, a firewall, and a
web server all in the same box.
The most popular products for the home and small office
are made by Buffalo Technology (
www.buffalotech.com), Netgear (
www.netgear.com), Cisco (
www.linksysbycicso.com), D-Link (
www.dlink.com), and several other companies like
Iomega and HP.
A terabyte of capacity seems to be the minimum standard
in capacity with prices starting from 200$. There are basic
specs that a buyer will look for such as drive size, buffer
size (8MB or higher is recommended) and speed (7200 RPM or
higher is recommended).
NAS comes with their own software implementation but
most supports the networking functionality to easily hook
up to a network. Some more advanced products allow
access to music and photos via your network or the Web so
you can keep all your photos and music on your NAS, and
access them from anywhere by simply browsing to the NAS
box’s address.

Be very careful to check what format it uses on its
disks and what maximum file size it supports. If you have a
DVD VOB file with 4GB or more in size you might not be able
to save it to a NAS that can handle only up to 2GB of file
size. I would prefer a NAS with NTFS disk format so
that I can plug it in a Windows computer easily.
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