31 points

Yet again another reason why I won’t buy proprietary systems like this. Make your own, if you know what a NAS is I’m sure you van handle it.

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8 points

I van handle everything… Honk Honk.

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51 points

Alright, I’ll just buy another one… from a brand that isn’t shit.

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74 points

Meanwhile Synology keeps updating my ageing NAS.

They may not have the best bang for the buck for hardware but their software package is really well put together.

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44 points

Sounds like D-Link is telling people to buy Synology.

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20 points

Or just build your own? I have an eight-bay running OMV that I built using one of these cool little mini-ITX towers.

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2 points

The “issue” I have with this case is the SFX format for the PSU, they are rare and more expensive.

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3 points

I bought my DS212 in 2012. Still going strong after two drive swaps. And now I feel old.

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10 points

Well whaddaya know, you get what you pay for.

That being said, companies should be legally obligated to provide security patches for a minimum number of years.

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8 points

My synology box is 8 years old now and still getting patches. I would actually buy it again. Good work.

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1 point

I could be a lot happier with Synology. Honestly. When it’s time to replace mine I’m just going to build one.

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1 point

Same. I’m just making a Truenas server next year when setting up the new network. It’s probably cheaper anyway.

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4 points

I have to say I’ve also been enjoying my synology - going on almost 7 years since this thing was released and I get security updates regularly still. Will buy again once this thing dies.

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24 points

Welp, looks like I’m changing brands next time I buy a router.

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9 points
*

Banana Pi R3 or R64 (OpenWRT). Some DIY assembly required but it will probably last you over a decade.

My favorite part about these is that they are unbrickable. There is no bootloader to permanently corrupt as the firmware that loads the flash chip is in mask memory and the firmware you load from OpenWRT is the bootloader + firmware. So even if the flash chip dies you can use the other flash chip on the board or with soldering skills replace it and re-flash it.

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32 points
*

Lenovo did this when they bought Iomega NAS devices. The final firmware before they ended support added google ads to the web admin interface. So now I have it booting Debian and OpenMediaVault, bye bye Lenovo.

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