You don’t have to spend hundreds of pounds on a Nas drive to get some extra
shared storage for your network.
It’s actually quite easy to take an existing hard disk – either an internal
or external model – and connect it your network. The most common option here is
to buy an ‘enclosure’ or ‘caddy’. This is simply an empty box that can hold one
or more internal disk drives, and which has an Ethernet adapter for the network
connection.
Netgear’s Network Storage Central SC101 is one of the most well-known options
here. It costs about £70 from online stores such as dabs.com, and can hold two
IDE drives for a total capacity of up to 2TB.
Another good option is
D-Link’s
DSM-G600. This is a bit more expensive, costing about £120, and can only
hold a single drive. However, it has wireless capabilities so you can easily
connect it to a wireless network or use it to extend an existing wired network.
It also has two USB2 ports on the back, which enable you to add more storage
in the form of ordinary USB hard drives. It even supports the UPnP standard,
allowing you to stream music or video files to a UPnP-compatible media player,
such as Pinnacle’s Soundbridge.
And, for the hardcore techies among you, the DSM-G600’s built-in firmware is
based on open-source code, so you’re free to modify it – perhaps setting it up
to run as an email or web server.
But perhaps the most convenient option we’ve come across is the Network
Storage Link from Linksys, which costs just £58 from www.broadbandbuyer.co.uk.
Instead of providing you with an empty enclosure for an internal disk drive, the
Storage Link acts as an Ethernet adapter for external USB disk drives.
It has an Ethernet port that allows you to connect it to your network, and
two USB2 ports. Any USB hard disk – or other devices such as a USB memory stick
– will automatically be connected to your network via the Storage Link.
The Storage Link includes good backup software and some useful extra
features, such as an email alert when the disk is almost full. In fact, we
wonder why the other Linksys Nas offering – the EFG120 – isn’t equally well
designed.
This article is part of a
group
test of network-attached devices.
See also
Adaptec Snap Server 110
Buffalo Linkstation Multimedia
Home Server
Buffalo Terastation Home
Server
Freecom Storage Gateway
WLAN
Iomega Storcenter Network Hard
Drive
La Cie Ethernet Disk Mini
Linksys EFG120
Maxtor Shared Storage II
Plextor PX-EH25L
Western Digital Netcenter
500
Living with NAS
The table of features an be read via our pdf download.
Reader comments