Yesterday, 09:43 PM
(This post was last modified: Yesterday, 09:51 PM by firmlyundecided.)
Hi all - after running out of Google storage space, instead of paying them a pittance more I've decided to pay a lot more to stand up my own NAS/home server. I've gone deep down the rabbit hole, but am still feeling choice paralysis for a system I want to last a decade. Here's my use cases:
1. File storage and backup (consolidating all my misc external HDDs and setting up automated Time Machine backups for my and my wife's Macs)
2. Photo backup & management (replacing Google Photos and creating redundancy to iCloud photos. I'm OK if this is 3rd party (e.g. Immich) instead of 1st party)
3. Lightweight web server (hosting a personal website that would get very low traffic)
4. VPN hosting for remote access
5. Home Assistant hosting
6. Media Server (I listed this last, because I don't currently have a media library, and won't start building one tomorrow, but I'd like to build one over time... via CD/Blu-Ray rips, of course. Plex or Jellyfin, start with Audio, then Direct Playback video, then Transcoding as needed)
7. Mail server? (I'd like to have a personal and secure non-Gmail account, but I've been a bit hesitant about this due to security concerns)
My contenders (unless you tell me otherwise):
1. Synology DS1522+: The leading candidate, only held back because it can't do native transcoding, and it's the most expensive. Maybe in a year or so I'd get an Nvidia Shield or similar device as a Plex server and use the NAS purely for media storage, but that just adds to the $$. Attracted to the strong software enabling nearly all uses cases (including mail server) with security and confidence
2. QNAP TS-464: Cheaper than Synology, with transcoding capabilities. I'm relatively tech savvy, though new to NAS, so I'm confident I could figure it out. Would QuTS be seamless enough for my non-technical wife?
3. DIY - Something like the Aoostar WTR Pro, even loaded with RAM is cheaper still. This would make standing up all the services I want a real deep-dive. I'm up for learning, but ongoing maintenance isn't something I want to spend hours a month on...
I'm running an Eero6 mesh network, so limited to 1Gbps for now, but future-proofing would be nice. With any choice I'd probably start by maxing RAM and getting a pair of 10-12TB Ironwolfs (target budget <$1k-1.2k).
I've watched all the NC vids, but a lot can change in tech in a few years. Maybe there isn't a bad choice among them, but help me decide! Thanks!
1. File storage and backup (consolidating all my misc external HDDs and setting up automated Time Machine backups for my and my wife's Macs)
2. Photo backup & management (replacing Google Photos and creating redundancy to iCloud photos. I'm OK if this is 3rd party (e.g. Immich) instead of 1st party)
3. Lightweight web server (hosting a personal website that would get very low traffic)
4. VPN hosting for remote access
5. Home Assistant hosting
6. Media Server (I listed this last, because I don't currently have a media library, and won't start building one tomorrow, but I'd like to build one over time... via CD/Blu-Ray rips, of course. Plex or Jellyfin, start with Audio, then Direct Playback video, then Transcoding as needed)
7. Mail server? (I'd like to have a personal and secure non-Gmail account, but I've been a bit hesitant about this due to security concerns)
My contenders (unless you tell me otherwise):
1. Synology DS1522+: The leading candidate, only held back because it can't do native transcoding, and it's the most expensive. Maybe in a year or so I'd get an Nvidia Shield or similar device as a Plex server and use the NAS purely for media storage, but that just adds to the $$. Attracted to the strong software enabling nearly all uses cases (including mail server) with security and confidence
2. QNAP TS-464: Cheaper than Synology, with transcoding capabilities. I'm relatively tech savvy, though new to NAS, so I'm confident I could figure it out. Would QuTS be seamless enough for my non-technical wife?
3. DIY - Something like the Aoostar WTR Pro, even loaded with RAM is cheaper still. This would make standing up all the services I want a real deep-dive. I'm up for learning, but ongoing maintenance isn't something I want to spend hours a month on...
I'm running an Eero6 mesh network, so limited to 1Gbps for now, but future-proofing would be nice. With any choice I'd probably start by maxing RAM and getting a pair of 10-12TB Ironwolfs (target budget <$1k-1.2k).
I've watched all the NC vids, but a lot can change in tech in a few years. Maybe there isn't a bad choice among them, but help me decide! Thanks!