I wanna brag of being a proud owner of Buffalo LS-W1.0TGL/R1 V3 (also known as Buffalo LinkStation Pro Duo)! There’re a lot of things I would like to share about that little thing but I want to start from the beginning…
It has been almost two years since I bought my first laptop and decided to do something about getting rid of any desktop PCs in my room. Unfortunately I don’t think the hard drive of my laptop is reliable enough as a storage and in fact it is not that large (100 GB are not much nowadays). I’m tired of always looking for the right CD/DVD, buying blank ones and turning on my desktop machine when I want to find something stored in its 200 GB hard drives…
Some time ago I tried the cheapest solution - putting hte larger hard drive in a USB enclosure. Unfortunately I wasn’t a successfull one - the RaidSonic Icy Box IB 351U-B I bought couldn’t power up my 120 GB IBM Deskstar hard drive. Then I found some information about Linksys NSLU2 but was adviced in a comment not hurry and wait for Linksys NAS200 to become available. And I waited…
Meanwhile a friend of mine told me that Buffalo have cheap linux-based alternatives to Linksys’s wireless routers (sadly Linksys have switched to VxWorks). When I noticed that NAS200 had finally arrived I remembered what Victor had told me and I searched for a Buffalo alternative to NSLU2 and NAS200. I needed a reliable network storage with a good capacity. And of course at a reasonable price. So this is what I found (and bought) is Buffalo LS-W1.0TGL/R1 - a relatively small (100 x 163 x 225 mm) device with two SATA hard drives (500 GB each), one gigabit network adapter, two USB 2.0 ports (for additional storage) and both RAID 0 (stripping) and RAID 1 (mirroring) capability. Several protocols are supported for accessing your shared folders - Samba (Workgroup, Domain and Active Directory setup support), FTP, HTTP(S) as well as DLNA Media Server. The access restriction is UNIX-based (it’s a Linux box, remember?).
I compared the prices of this solution with those with NSLU2 (incl. two external USB enclosures and two 320 GB hard drives) and NAS200 (incl. 320 GB hard drives) and the Buffalo solution turned out to be just a bit more expensive - a price that I gladly paid for the comfort of having a relatively small and integrated solution (with only power and network cables) with larger storage.
OK. That’s what you would read from the brochure. The really interesting thing here is Buffalo release the sources of their firmware (as the GPL license requires them) and it can be optionally replaced with other. You can currently choose between FreeLink (Debian based) and GenLink (Gentoo based), each of them having some features in additional to the original firmware’s ones. More on these and many other handy stuff about Buffalo’s NAS devices can be found at NAS Central.
Fine! My PC is now on sale… stay tuned for a post on that.
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