Reddit Reddit reviews Pogoplug Series 4 Backup Device

We found 11 Reddit comments about Pogoplug Series 4 Backup Device. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Electronics
Computers & Accessories
Data Storage
Pogoplug Series 4 Backup Device
Continuous, centralized backup of all of your computers (Windows or Mac) and iPhone, iPad or Android devicesBackup continues even when you take your computers or devices away from your home or officeKeep your files safely at home but access them from anywhere60-second setup never worry about backing up againNo storage limits and no additional fees when using your own external hard driveNo PC requiredIncludes 2 USB 3.0, 1 USB, 1 SD Card Slot, and 1 USM/SATA Slot
Check price on Amazon

11 Reddit comments about Pogoplug Series 4 Backup Device:

u/keenerd · 10 pointsr/linux

Sata and gigabit has been around for years for a mere $40. Note that you can get them for $20 if you shop around.

u/rmvaandr · 4 pointsr/privacy

The pogoplug with debian or arch linux + tor is another good option for less than $20

http://www.amazon.com/Pogoplug-Series-4-Backup-Device/dp/B006I5MKZY/

http://archlinuxarm.org/platforms/armv5/pogoplug-series-4

u/Binsky89 · 3 pointsr/linux_devices

Thank you for this. I did not know that the Pogo Plug was anything more than a simple NAS adapter.

Edit: Actually, this is the newest version. It comes equiped with USB 3.0. I wonder if they could somehow be used as a DVR...

Edit 2: If you can still return yours, ebay has them for $29.99.

u/im-the-stig · 3 pointsr/DIY

RaspberryPi is pretty bad when it comes to being a fileserver (wonder how much throughput you get). It is because the network port adapted off of the USB, so transferring files from a USB hard-disk, you are potentailly halving the USB bandwidth.

I'd suspect even a PogoPlug (with ArchLinux, original firmware is useless), should be better.

Cheapest option

This one has USB3, SATA and couple of more USB2 port.

u/fourdots · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

Very, very little. It doesn't take very much for that sort of throughput; you'd need more than a Raspberry Pi (having the ethernet controller on the USB bus is a pretty big constraint), but not much more - you could probably do something really interesting with a $20 Pogoplug, especially considering that Arch will run on it, though I haven't seen any benchmarks for it.

However, I'd strongly suggest considering buying a dedicated NAS - basic two-bay diskless NASes can be had for around $100 (the Buffalo LinkStation 421e, for instance) or less - or building one (I built one based on a J1900 board a few months back). It's not much more expensive, and the experience is likely to be much better with everything inside one case.

u/broken_symlink · 1 pointr/linux

You can use a dreamplug, but its a bit expensive. It looks you can install a ftp server on a pogoplug. There are probably a lot more ways you can do what you want, but those are just a few.

u/chipt4 · 1 pointr/hardwareswap

> Pogoplug POGO-V4-A3-01

The one on the right is $32
http://www.amazon.com/Pogoplug-Series-4-Backup-Device/dp/B006I5MKZY

u/wonderfulquest · 1 pointr/SuggestALaptop

Thanks, I am going to buy the pogoplug. Mainly because I already have a 1TB and a 1.5TB portable drives that I am not using at all.

There are these two

http://www.amazon.com/New-Media-sharing-device-black-POGOP21/dp/B005FNDJHS/ref=sr_1_10?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1411508302&sr=1-10

http://www.amazon.com/Pogoplug-Series-4-Backup-Device/dp/B006I5MKZY/ref=sr_1_1?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1411508302&sr=1-1

They are both $19. Do you know which one is better?

u/Aractor · 1 pointr/LinuxActionShow

Any difference between the pogoplug linked in the OP, and the Pogoplug "series 4"? http://www.amazon.com/Pogoplug-Series-4-Backup-Device/dp/B006I5MKZY