Reddit Reddit reviews Synology 2 bay NAS DiskStation DS218+ (Diskless)

We found 26 Reddit comments about Synology 2 bay NAS DiskStation DS218+ (Diskless). Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Electronics
Computers & Accessories
Computer Network Attached Storage
Data Storage
Synology 2 bay NAS DiskStation DS218+ (Diskless)
Encrypted sequential throughput performance at over 113 MB/s reading and 112 MB/s writingDual-core Processor with AES-NI encryption engine2GB DDR3L memory (expandable up to 6GB)Advanced Bars file system offering 65, 000 system-wide snapshots and 1, 024 snapshots per shared folderLive transcoding of up to two concurrent H. 265/H. 264 4K video streamingBy default, two camera licenses are installed; extra licenses can be purchased (CLP1, CLP4, or CLP8)
Check price on Amazon

26 Reddit comments about Synology 2 bay NAS DiskStation DS218+ (Diskless):

u/swatlord · 12 pointsr/sysadmin

Without the click tracking referral link:

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B075N1BYWX/

u/ExplodingLemur · 9 pointsr/homelabsales

You might be thinking of the DS218j which is currently going for $170 on Amazon. The DS218+ is $300

u/thekillboss · 7 pointsr/HomeServer

Hello! A small NAS should be a good solution for your company. If you want to increase the level of security you could always buy another NAS which replicates the first one. Another option would be a daily backup which you carry home with you after a work day. If your server gets destroyed the data is still save.


I don't know what exactly you mean with your question but some companies allow thier users to use addons or other services to download stuff directly on you NAS-Server (e.g. Synology, QNAP). For your local network the speeds should be sufficent but they won't be really good. Consumer NAS servers usually have a gigabit connection and can therefore transfere at a speed of ~100 MBps. For normal office work the speed should be enough and you won't notice any slowdowns.

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If you haven't bought a device yet you should consider buying an used industiral server with a good RAID controller and sufficent RAM. You can find these all over eBay and other platforms.

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Synology and QNAP are known for reasonable prices, easy installation and good speeds.

https://www.amazon.com/Synology-bay-DiskStation-DS218j-Diskless/dp/B076G6YKWZ/ref=sr_1_4?keywords=nas+server+2+bay&qid=1563207524&s=gateway&smid=ATVPDKIKX0DER&sr=8-4

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https://www.amazon.com/Synology-Bay-DiskStation-DS218-Diskless/dp/B075N1BYWX/ref=sr_1_3?keywords=nas+server+2+bay&qid=1563207533&s=gateway&sr=8-3

u/dak_181 · 6 pointsr/funny

No need to wait for net neutrality to die, get one of these and start downloading before data caps kick in.

Synology DS218+ NAS DiskStation, Diskless, 2-bay; 2GB DDR3L https://www.amazon.com/dp/B075N1BYWX/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_xhlfAbNZEWS2T

Up to 24 TB capacity depending on the drives you put in it, setting up RAID protocols on it is super easy so your backup is covered. I think it even has built in plex support so a wizard will walk you through getting the streaming side of stuff configured.

u/ChromeShavings · 6 pointsr/homelab

Do you have redundancy? I would host your first website on something inexpensive, such as a Synology NAS. 2 disk should suffice using a RAID 1 mirror. Here’s the one I use for hosting my family website:

Synology 2 bay NAS DiskStation DS218+ (Diskless) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B075N1BYWX/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_nCawDbW5YYM1H

u/Bgrngod · 4 pointsr/PleX

Cheapest Synology unit that can handle transcoding comfortably would be the 218+: https://www.amazon.com/Synology-Bay-DiskStation-DS218-Diskless/dp/B075N1BYWX/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1542135271&sr=8-1&keywords=218+synology

Look over the "Celeron" units on this page for their other units that scale up in features: https://www.synology.com/en-us/knowledgebase/DSM/tutorial/General/What_kind_of_CPU_does_my_NAS_have

Based on the descriptions for the QNAP TS-251+, which indicates an unnamed Celeron at 2.0ghz burst up to 2.42, I am guessing the CPU is the Celeron J1900. That CPU is from 2013, so the hardware encoding in it might not be nearly as good as more current CPU's, even with the higher Passmark score it appears to be sporting compared to the J3355 in the 218+ I linked above.

u/plonkeres · 4 pointsr/television

He's talking about just a easy to set up file server - they make hardware that you shove a bunch of hard drives into and it comes with its own OS that's easy to connect to with your PC. Something like this:

https://www.amazon.com/Synology-bay-DiskStation-DS218-Diskless/dp/B075N1BYWX

Personally, I think it's easier to use streaming sites if you have a good internet connection. You just have to know how to find them.

u/mcribgaming · 3 pointsr/HomeNetworking

Synology 2 bay NAS DiskStation DS218+ (Diskless) for $254.99 (Reg: $299.99) on Amazon

According to camelx3, this sale price is close to it's recorded low pricing for this unit. Camel has a small window of a couple of days when this unit was at $249, so this sale is just $5 higher. If you look at camel's historical price, this unit very rarely goes on any kind of sale.

Again, does a Synology fan want to comment on the quality of this deal?

u/rochford77 · 3 pointsr/PleX

No, what I am saying is that usb enclosure is good for now. But be sure to get drives that can be removed, that way if you ever upgrade to something like this the drives are still useable.

u/km_irl · 3 pointsr/HomeServer

Synology is a good choice. QNAP is another vendor that a lot of people like. Regardless of vendor, I would get something with Ethernet connectivity so you can stream media from it, back up your computers, etc. I would also set it up with mirrored drives, so that if one drive fails you don't lose your stuff.

The Synology DS218+ looks pretty reasonable. That and a couple of big cheap Black Friday NAS drives and you could be up and running for $600-$900 depending on the size of drives you get. I don't know if this sounds like a little or a lot to you because I don't know your budget.

I do have a preschooler though, so I know how kids can impact disposable income. I have $2.5k in my 8-bay e3 xeon freenas box, luckily completed before my son was born. It's powerful and it does everything I need it to do. I highly recommend this solution if you like to tinker and spend money.

A lot of folks on the datahoarder subreddit buy western digital easystore external usb drives for bulk storage. I believe the last DAT sale had 8tb easystores going for $160 or so. They are just normal sata drives inside.

u/10001001011010111010 · 2 pointsr/OculusQuest

A network attached storage like this.
But any usb drive connected to your router or a folder on your pc that is shared in your network as a media server works as well for media streaming. It will show up in Oculus Gallery on Quest and in other media apps like Skybox.

u/Thaksin_Shinawatra · 2 pointsr/DataHoarder
u/rogo725 · 2 pointsr/homelabsales
u/OldTechSucks · 2 pointsr/homelab

can you review if the parts(in the table) good for Synology DSM xpenology or did you mean to buy Snology

like Synology 2 bay NAS DiskStation DS218+ ?

Will I be able to use Calibre server, Ubooquity, plex and encryption(like linux LUKS) on it and access from multiple devices(laptop, raspberry pi) etc like I mentioned in the original post?

u/JoeB- · 2 pointsr/HomeServer

It really depends on what you want to do now and potentially later. You can buy...

  1. an external HDD like the WD 10TB My Book Desktop External Hard Drive for $206.98 USD and connect it to the laptop,
  2. a consumer NAS like the Synology 2 bay NAS DiskStation DS218+ (Diskless) for $289.62 USD plus the cost of HDDs,
  3. a PC that can take a couple of hard drives like the HP EliteDesk 800 G1 SFF i7-4770 3.40Ghz 16GB RAM 2TB HDD 240GB SSD Win 10 Pro (Renewed) for $315.99 USD plus a larger HDD,
  4. something like the HP ProLiant MicroServer Gen10 Ultra Quad-core 8GB DDR4 SDRAM Serial ATA/600 Controller Micro Tower Server Model P03698-S01 for $395.00 USD plus the cost of HDDs, or
  5. any number of other options.

    Since you are familiar with Ubuntu, which is based on Debian, you should look into Proxmox VE, which is a Debian server with custom tools and a web UI for creating and managing Linux containers (LXCs) and kernel-based virtual machines (KVMs) and storage management. LXCs are similar to Docker containers except they behave more like virtual machines. Pre-built LXC containers including tons of web development frameworks like LAMP, Node.js, Drupal, Django etc. are available from TurnKey Linux for downloading and installing in minutes. Great fun!
u/Letcherouss · 2 pointsr/preppers

I probably could have written that better instead of making assumptions. If I were to be in the mood for entertainment and a kindle was my only source I'd more than likely have porn for that, outside of entertainment of course I'd have books for when I needed them. I don't read books for entertainment now, if I'm reading a book it's going to be I.T based.

You don't need a few laptops just get an external enclosure like the one I have and stockpile hard drives and write on the drive label what's on it. Or you can setup a NAS or just build a computer with a case that could hold 16 hard drives and load them up.

u/dragontamer5788 · 1 pointr/buildapc

NAS == Network Attached Storage. In short: its a dedicated computer for your hard drives. As such, you can have all sorts of awesome software on it that automatically runs checks and ensures that the data remains as clean as possible.

Over the long term, if you want to really keep your data safe, you can't rely on passive storage. You need software to automatically run checks and fix errors that pop up.

You can connect a NAS to your network, and your main computers will read/write data to it as if it were a normal hard drive. It pretends to be a hard drive, while offering a lot of protections for you.

> No idea what NAS is r any of those terms after "2 hard drives".

ZFS is Solaris Unix's resilient filesystem, designed to combat bitrot and disk failures. In practice, you get ZFS for free when you install something like FreeNAS.

Storage Spaces is Microsoft / Windows solution to resiliency. If you're more of a Windows person, you'll need to buy a Windows License for $100, but there are certainly benefits. I do prefer the $0 software solution however.

RAID1 is an older technology: it means pair two hard drives together. Whenever data is written to one hard drive, write it to the 2nd hard drive automatically. It fails to deal with the case of bit-rot (if one drive bitrots, you don't know which drive holds the correct data). But still, because two hard drives are working together, you need to lose both hard drives before you lose all the data.

In short: RAID1 is protection against catastrophic disk-failure. If someone shoots your computer with a gun, destroying one hard drive... its fine. All your data was automatically copied to the 2nd hard drive already. You then can buy a new hard drive and restore the RAID1 functionality. Only if both hard drives fail before you restore the RAID will you lose data.

The case of bitrot is way harder to deal with though. So in practice, you should use ZFS or Storage Spaces.

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NAS4Free is my software of choice. It is $0 on the FreeBSD operating system (kinda like Linux but different). So you don't pay for Windows, and you only need a $5 4GB USB drive to boot NAS4Free.

CPU + Motherboard of course will run you ~$150 or so, +4GB of RAM to 16GB of RAM (depending on how strong of a NAS you want). You can build a cheap NAS for $250 total, or buy one prebuilt for ~$300. I personally prefer to build my own however.

Hard drives come separately of course. Grab 2x 5TB Hard Drives for $300 and you've got a build for a total of ~$550 or so.

u/Likelinus14 · 1 pointr/FL_Studio

I use this NAS as my own personal cloud storage. I don't have any experience using it for sharing FL Studio files, but I imagine it's no different than any other files really. You can sign into the NAS from anywhere at anytime. It's pretty great, albeit a bit pricey upfront. But you'll never have to pay for a subscription cloud storage!

u/ATLrising1 · 1 pointr/PleX

I've done a fair amount of reading on plex servers and file sharing, but I still have a pretty elementary understanding so I'm hoping for some critique/constructive criticism on my plans. I plan on supporting up to 4 plex streams all through Wifi to TVs, tablets, laptops, phones. No remote access at this point. I plan on using a NAS device as storage for tv shows/movies/music and it will also be a torrenting machine. Then have another computer serve as the plex media server. This is probably overkill, but here's what I was planning:

File Storage/Torrenting server

Synology 2 Bay NAS

WD 4TB Hard Drive (x2)

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Plex Media Server

Micro ATX Case

Gigabyte Motherboard

Ryzen 5 2600 CPU - 13000 passmark

8 GB Ram

Graphics Card

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Still trying to figure out the power supply for the PMS. I think 550w should be ample. I also have a 1TB hard drive from years ago that I think I can use with this. If not I'll just get another one. My understanding is PMS transcoding isn't burdensome on RAM, but more processors cores/threads so I made sure I have ample room there.

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The one caveat is this will be in the living room right underneath the main TV, so I wanted to try and keep noise level down. Or is this all just unnecessry overkill and I should just look at a T710/T310 dell server as the PMS?

u/SativaSammy · 1 pointr/ShieldAndroidTV

Would you recommend this + this ?

u/AdmiralHusker · 1 pointr/organization
u/double-float · 1 pointr/buildapc

So you're not going to be doing Dolphin on a NAS, I admit, but you can certainly do real-time 4K H.264/265 transcoding on something of lower cost and lower CPU power- one example:

https://www.amazon.com/Synology-bay-DiskStation-DS218-Diskless/dp/B075N1BYWX/

You really don't need an 8600K for that sort of thing - transcoding isn't that demanding.

If, on the other hand, this is all to indulge your need to tinker with stuff, then go for it. All I'm saying is that there are easier and cheaper ways to get where you wanna go :)

u/iAtty · 1 pointr/buildapc

I'd probably not do a Raspberry Pi for that. The Pi 4 is robust enough but I think it would run out of steam rather quickly. There isn't a dedicated PLEX app for it either.

I'd probably go with a Synology all-in-one NAS file server which will also have packages available to integrate backup services, run PLEX, etc.

On a Synology DS218+ you could run two concurrent h.265 4k streams via PLEX. Since you aren't planning to do redundancy you could just run two 8TB or 10TB drives in RAID0 for stripping to give the best performance. Synology integrates into BackBlaze B2 very easily.

If you want more space, you can go to a 4 or 5 bay Synology. The bigger units have SSD cache options (likely not needed) and more RAM expandability options. They also support expansion bays to add more storage or on-prem backups. The costs go up rather quickly on those units though, without disks I believe the 5 bay is $500.

Personally, I run my entire system off a Mac mini connected headless to my network and just screen share it. It runs a 8TB RAID1 for me that all backs up to back blaze. Down the line I'll go with a 5 Bay Synology with RAID5 that will act as my entire file server and media streaming server.

The Synology runs their own distro of Linux and is extremely user friendly. It can also run home surveillance systems and a bunch of other packages for various uses. We love them.

u/kingfischer48 · 0 pointsr/DataHoarder

We use these at work for our surveillance.

For home use you can pair with this or this