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Choosing First Nas Setup

#1
Greetings, i recently subscribe to your youtube channel and have become an attempt to understand the world of Storage. I recently lost 2 hard drives and almost lost a 3 (wife) which contains an ungodly amount of podcast episodes, videos, and more.

I've come to explore a more secure way to store long-term information that pertains to m e and my wife's files.

Ive been curious about the brand Synology due to some of its features. we recently have a baby and we are constantly taking photos and videos of our little one and i would like a method of storing those in a central place via our phone. But i also need a system that can store a large amount of graphics, videos, and production videos from our work.

I would also if possible like to explore a system that i can access while outside of my home if possible to either upload or download files.

there are alot of terminology which i just can't seem to wrap my head around. if you can assist me and point me in the right direction i would greatly appreciate it. Until your reply, I will continue to explore your videos and read online to see which would be the most sound solution for my need.

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#2
Hi mate!! First off, congratulations on the new baby - I hear that they can be messy at first, but after a while they really get brilliant! So, first and foremost, it's worth highlighting that you need to ensure you have a 2 step/stage backup. Having the photos/data/etc on your phones and sending them to the NAS is ONLY a backup if you intend to keep all that phone/PC/etc data on those devices too - else (as you found with your drive failure) if you delete from those devices to make space, you no longer have a backup - the NAS will have the ONLY COPY of that data in existence. So, you should look at a NAS and a USB backup, or small/free cloud space to backup key files via the software included with the NAS. For your needs, I would recommend a Synology, as they are remarkably user-friendly. However, given the volume of your data (and indeed the type) you are going to have to start with at least 2-4GB of memory, and x86 CPU and maybe even a 4 Bay minimum for future-proofing (you do not need to fully populate the system with HDDs, you Can run on just 1-2 HDDs (remember to have your data in a 2nd location though) and add drives later as time/budget allows. I would say go for the DS920+ (regularly on offer and you can pick it up on sales even now), the DS1621+ if you do not plan on being too close to the system but want to get seriously future proof (scaling towards 10GbE for video editing/production and more storage in years to come) or wait till the Synology DS923+ arrives in order to stay 'current'. Though do remember that it still does not have a confirmed ETA and will be very close to the launch RRP. Hope this helps!
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Robbie
NASCompares
Simply Passionate About Storage
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