
I was considering acquiring a secondary storage device to keep a "live" copy of all my photos, e-books etc. for some time now. My first option was an external hard drive, but the need to switch it between machines and physically plug and un-plug the thing didn't seem very attractive. So I decided to swallow the extra cost and invest in a NAS. The device that really caught my attention was the NSLU2 by Linksys, it's a great little gadget for reasons you can see better on Wikipedia here. The reason that put me off was the number of boxes & physical connections that would have meant adding to my current set up (ie. NSLU2, External drive, 2 power supplies, USB cabling..) all my network gadgets are currently residing in a shelf on the TV rack and drawing their power from a single surge suppressor so I needed a neater solution. Uditha was the one who suggested the NAS200 and i decided on it after a lot of pondering and reading through some reviews (reviews on the 200 are scarce as of now) which were pretty unambiguous in stating that the NAS200 was quite slow compared to the other NAS offerings. The deciding factor as usual was the budget, setting my sights on a faster device would have meant upping the investment by about 50% at least.
The NAS200 has internal space for two 3.5" SATA drives, 2 USB ports for further expansion and a 10/100 Ethernet connection. It also supports SMB & FTP and includes hardware support for RAID.
Both the NAS as well as the 500GB Seagate drive despite the fact I ordered them from different places, arrived on Wednesday. Installation was really easy, I didn't expect the drive installation to be totally tool-free but it was. Just popped out the top drive cover and slid in the SATA drive. Plugging in the power supply consumed the last remaining outlet at the TV. Any more additions to the network or entertainment will mean a new surge protector. The rest was easy as powering on and accessing the admin utility on the browser. I assigned a static ip and asked it to go ahead and format the drive, which it did in under 2 minutes! that's quite cool for 500GB I think.
The web-based admin utility is pretty intuitive and the few basic functions are arranged logically so no user should have trouble getting around the features.
There is a small utility that you can install on the PC which allows you to map a network drive to the NAS200 via an interface which lists all the shares published on the NAS.
I also set up a virtual server on my router which now forwards all incoming internet FTP traffic to the NAS200. Now I (or anyone else who has privileges :) can access the drive's contents over the internet.
I loaded the drive with all my photos which have been distributed over a string of CDs and DVDs, the transfer took nearly 1.5 hours for 8+GB of data since I uploaded it over the air. I should have plugged in to the router for that.. By now I have uploaded my documents as well as the e-books which has taken slightly over 15 GB in total. The console says I have 450 GB left and I guess that should be good for a while, even though I have not yet loaded any of the work related stuff that I plan to.
I can agree with the reviews and it is not a very speedy solution, but since I don't plan on using it for sustained multi-gigabyte transfers I'm not very concerned. Even though it's not connected to the NAS's architecture, what I am concerned about is recovery of all this storage. What if the drive gives up the ghost ? What I'd love to do is get another 500GB drive and put this puppy on RAID 1. I'd sleep a lot better then!

