^ wouldn't setting up a dropbox solution in a windows environment save you from those hassles?
Not at all. You still need email notification of failed drives, you still need to set up FTP and network shares for things that don't use or work with dropbox, you still want/need remote access to monitor processes ... and ideally you want to be able to do that through some sort of web interface that isn't bandwidth-heavy (so remote desktop is out of the question; you don't get good wifi everywhere).
And I’d argue the point that putting a Windows environment on a NAS actually makes things more complicated than they need to be ... but if that’s the only OS you know how to use, I guess you’re stuck with that.
I actually had a paid Dropbox setup (100GB) at one point, for keeping some things synced between home server and other devices (desktop, laptop, etc). Let’s just say that beyond a certain number of files you start running into some
hiccups and other irritating issues, like taking forever to index, having to restart it manually sometimes (which means sshing on Linux, or if you’re using Windows, remote-desktoping—better hope for a good connection). Not to mention some inherent limitations like only 1 level of selective sync for folders, and slow upload speeds for no reason at all (25KB/s sometimes, 250KB/s sometimes, on a fiber line that can get 2–10MB/s to Google Drive).
Cancelled it after a few months, went back to FTP/rsync for remote syncing/access instead.
I guess I can notch it down to an i3. I got the DF-85 case unless there is another case you would recommend with lots and lots of bays.
@ kita - can you set up a list for me then? I can also install an add-on with SATA 6GB connections to it? I mean, looking at the FreeNAS8 software and all, would it be able to recognize add-ons? And what case would you recommend? I'd rather keep the DF-85 for my next build.
Edit - Yeah the more I look at it the more I want to stay away from pre-built NAS. That guide I posted is pretty easy to do. Plus I'm purchasing WD Reds which is very reliable for NAS.
1) If it's mainly for torrenting, FTP/file access, and not as a transcoding media server, a Pentium will be more than enough (even the Baytrail-based Pentiums). My AS-606T is using a Cedarview Atom (32nm, 2011) and it’s enough for everything except HD video transcoding for streaming.
2) You won't need SATA 6GB connections; over a GbE link the most you will get is 100MB/s anyway. Unless you're planning to do things with it that involve an SSD for some reason, which IMO is just unnecessary expenditure.
Setup should be easy. just install your server OS of choice, connect it via LAN to a router that's on the same network as your devices, configure your router to forward the necessary ports for whatever services you are using on your server, done. If you want a hostname for your server through DDNS, that’s a few more steps depending on your DDNS provider.