Buffalo’s second entry in the Nas category is really quite impressive. The
Terastation’s resemblance to a small bank vault is surely intentional – Buffalo
wants you to feel that your data is as safe as cash in the bank.
Like Maxtor’s Shared
Storage II drive, the Terastation provides a full terabyte of storage.
However, the Terastation is more than £100 cheaper than its Maxtor rival, so
it’s the best option if you really want to go the whole hog and add as much
capacity as you can.
Inside the Terastation are four separate 250GB drives (which accounts for its
thumping 7.2kg weight). This allows you to use an option known as Raid 5, which
sacrifices one of the drives (reducing overall capacity to 750GB) but provides
additional reliability.
Home users may prefer to treat the Terastation as an ordinary 1TB drive, but
the extra reliability of Raid 5 will appeal to business users.
The installation process was quite straightforward. A small program called
the Client Utility locates the drive on your network, checks its IP address and
then adds it to the list of Network Places.
All the other options, such as user accounts, shared folders and Raid
settings, are configured via a web browser. You can also add network printers or
extra storage using the four USB ports – two each on the front and back of the
unit. There are even separate indicator lights for each of the four drives,
telling you when they’re in use and when each drive is full.
Buffalo has clearly put a lot of thought into the design of the Terastation.
The one big disappointment is the lack of cross-platform support for Macs or
Linux. Still, if you’ve got a PC-only network that needs plenty of shared
storage, the Terastation is a real thoroughbred solution.
This article is part of a
group
test of network-attached devices.
See also
Adaptec Snap Server 110
Buffalo Linkstation Multimedia
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
DIY NAS
The table of features can be read via our pdf download.
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