• 2 Posts
  • 13 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: October 27th, 2023

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  • I understand. If you want basic file storage and nothing else, sure, the ARM variant will work fine. But in that case, consider other options that are cheaper than Synology.

    But my point is if you’re buying into Synology, you get tons of great apps from Synology that are very useful, but can’t make use of many of them due to performance, limited RAM (just 2GB available for DS423) or just that they don’t bother to compile for ARM.

    And if you ever do anything more than basic file storage, expect your general performance to be affected.

    It’s like asking if a bicycle will get you to work and back. Sure it will do the job, but there’s better options out there.




  • Wi-fi is entirely dependent on your network setup, it has nothing to do with your NAS. You hook up your NAS to your router and if it has wi-fi set up you would access it like anything else on your network.

    I’d opt for the four bay, just make sure it’s an Intel or AMD CPU (the “+” variants), none of the ARM CPU’s (like the Realtek) .It’s just too weak and you lose out on a lot of Synology apps because they have very limited options with the ARM CPU versions. Their “Active Backup for Business” app is excellent for backing up client PC’s, but is not supported by the ARM CPU version, just as one example.

    I’d start with much larger drives, better $/TB and last you longer without having to upgrade. Start with two of same capacity and format as SHR-1. You can then add other disks as needed, and give you one disk redundancy.

    You can grab 18TB refurbished/recertified/used for $160-180. Visit serverpartdeals as they have a good reputation and 2 year warranty on used drives. Otherwise pay the premium for a new disk with 3 or 5 year warranty.

    Hard drives make noise. In most cases in a small office environment it’s no louder than other ambient noise. Otherwise set it up in a “server closet” just make sure it has plenty of ventilation, or opt for SSD’s and pay that premium.

    But lastly, don’t forget about backups. Either an external drive that you connect periodically to backup your NAS, then store away from your primary NAS, or buy another NAS for backup purposes, or store it in the cloud.