Here at the Case House, we’re pretty sophisticated home users, as you might imagine. Even if you ignore me, for a moment, there are my two daughters. Elizabeth (now at UCLA) and Emily (who is a sophomore in high school) are both tech savvy users. Elizabeth is best thought of as a power user, particularly when it comes to cell phones and laptops. She’s also a gifted digital photographer and expert Photoshop user (as it applies to photography.)

Emily is more of a power Internet user and gamer. Facebook is always open on her system, as is iTunes. She users her iPod Classic as much for games as for music, and she’s been known to boot up some pretty serious PC games – Titan Quest, Neverwinter Nights 2 and others.

My wife, on the other hand, will tell you she’s not particularly tech savvy. In one sense, she’s right. I had to set up Harmony One universal remote or she would have never figured out the home theater. She still looks to me for basic hardware support, like setting up her work laptop for dual displays whenever she disconnects and reconnects the laptop. In other ways, though, she’s a sophisticated user of tech, building web pages for her company, initiating and managing teleconferencing sites and designing corporate training curricula.

On top of that, we’re all multi-PC users. Elizabeth has both a full featured laptop and netbook. Emily can be found using the communal living room laptop for homework, sometimes more so than the desktop PC in her room.

As for me – I want access to media, music, benchmarking apps, game patches and other useful software from any location in the house. Keeping my PC on 24/7 really isn’t the right answer: network storage is.

What Do You Mean “Network Storage?”

The situation with network storage isn’t as simple as it should be. There exist a spectrum of choices, depending on what you actually need:

  • Small, single drive systems that attach to your network and simply become another hard drive to your PC, albeit slower.

  • Network attached storage (NAS) devices that offer additional flexibility, including automated backups, USB printer access through the network and some degree of user account control.

  • Media savvy NAS boxes that build on basic NAS capability, then add plugin capability. For example, the ReadyNAS from Netgear offers the ability to run a Slimserver plugin, letting you access digital music stored on the server with Logitech SqueezeBox digital media adapters.

  • Interesting convergence devices that are both NAS boxes and media servers, like the Mediagate line of hardware, or Western Digital’s WD TV.

  • PC based servers. These can range from consumer oriented Windows Home Servers to full on multicore hardware running Windows Server 2003 or one of the many Linux
    distros.

  • The final solution is cloud storage – something that’s still new to a lot of home users, and exists in multiple implementations and at varying cost structures.

In an ideal world, you’d assess your needs and pick the network storage technology that suits your needs. In the Case House, most of our network storage needs have been ably handled by one of the original ReadyNAS 600 systems, built and sold by Infrant prior to its acquisition by Netgear. The system originally shipped with 1TB of storage (four 250GB drives), set up in RAID 5 mode.

After several years, the oddball paddlewheel cooling fan began to die, so I replaced both the fan and PSU, while simultaneously upgrading the hard drives to four 500GB drives (2TB total, about 1.6TB usable in RAID 5.) The ReadyNAS has since been working fine, humming quietly in the basement lab storage area, giving me no problems and doing its job.

So naturally, I wanted something different.

The X Factor
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  • loydcase - Thursday, December 3, 2009 - link

    Thanks to everyone for some great comments. I think the Anandtech community is terrific.

    Some additional comments:

    1. I've already updated to Power Pack 3.

    2. As noted, this is something of an experimental platform for me, allowing me a WHS playground. So the fact that it doesn't have a lot of pre-installed add-ons (eg, HP's software that supports Time Machine) is fine. Besides, I don't have any Macs anyway ;-)

    3. In the postmortem, I also mentioned that the configuration could be tuned for different users. The motherboard is too limited for my liking, but it's what I had on hand. Similarly, the hard drives are pricey, but since they were just sitting on a shelf...

    4. I've used both straight up Linux and FreeNAS in the past. Even on old, supported hardware, FreeNAS never quite installed correctly. Linux required too much hands-on for my taste. Both are great solutions in the right environment -- just not something I want to fool with.

    5. Unlike the system building articles I've written in the past, whenever I write one here, there will be a postmortem, as with this article, talking about how it could be different or improved -- or whether it was even successful. Too many DIY articles I've read make things seem perfect at the end -- it's always about tradeoffs, and sometimes, stuff just doesn't work.

    Again, thanks. I'm looking forward to writing more stuff for Anand.
  • mjfink - Thursday, December 3, 2009 - link

    I built a server for the house about 6 months ago using an MSI Wind NetTop. 150 bucks for the server, another 50 for the RAM, and 100 for a 1TB HDD. Running Windows 2003 server; works great, allows me to create a domain for the house/run local DNS/etc. And, of course, I can run all apps you can dream up on it (it currently runs PRTG, uTorrent w/RSS feeds, DNS, AD, No-IP Dynamic Update Client, iDrive, and a few other things I can't remember off the top of my head). It's infinitely more flexible then a pre-built, and much less expensive as well. No RAID? Who cares, get a MyBook Mirror edition if you need RAID; storage should be external to these things anyway.
  • dtgoodwin - Thursday, December 3, 2009 - link

    I started out with Windows 2008 x64 serving up my files. Very easy to use for an experienced user and worked just fine. I ended up using Hyper-V to host my WHS (I'm using Hyper-V to host other virtual machines as well). I didn't want to add any more hardware, and reallocated my storage disks to be used as pass-through disks for WHS. Throughput is about 90% of what it was under 2K8 - pretty impressive considering it's virtualized. The reason I chose to move to WHS - on top of Server 2008 is the flexibility in storage. I am no longer limited by the size of a partition. I have a large movie collection as well as family photos. Now, I just add a drive if I need more. I'm not restricted to any volume size for any shared folder as long as I have available space. Yes, I could buy an expensive RAID controller that supports adding drives to a redundant array, but that's way out of my price range. Compared to merging volumes in 2K8 which would be my only choice to expand volumes seamlessly, I only lose the data on a single drive in WHS if I was ever to lose one. I do have full backups on external drives. The backup features often aren't discussed in great detail. It only backs up ONE copy of each unique file so if you back up two machines with the same OS, the total backup size is pretty small. I keep most files on my server. My backups (6 months of monthly, 4 weeks of weekly, 7 days of daily) only occupy 130 GB and that's across 3 different OS', and 7 different machines. It can do file by file restores, or whole system recovery. It wakes my machines to back them up, and then they go back to sleep (S3). It enables easy remote access to your files for those that don't know how to set it up as well as serves as an RDP gateway for all the machines that are attached to it and capable. I would never go back to 2K8 for file serving at my home.
  • curaven - Tuesday, December 8, 2009 - link

    Hey Thanks
    This is lovely to hear.
    I've searched far and wide for exactly this comparison and now I'm going to purchase WHS for my own home server instead of using Server 2008.

    For the record, has anyone an idea when WHS will get a kernel update? (server 2003 vs server 2008)
  • flipmode - Thursday, December 3, 2009 - link

    $970 would have been better spend on some drywall, paint, and studs to cover up that rugged-arse wall you desk is pushed up against.
  • strikeback03 - Thursday, December 3, 2009 - link

    Who said anything about it being a finished basement?
  • pcfxer - Thursday, December 3, 2009 - link

    Free, omg, go GRAB IT NOW! It costs nothing and can be installed on a hard disk, CD-ROM or flashed and run as an "embedded" device. More flexible control over hardware like enabling power level settings for SMART, automatic e-mail, OpenPF firewall, torrenting, etc. AND above all else, ZFS support. Let's see windows home server do that and with less powerful hardware and for LESS MONEY!

    http://www.freenas.org/">http://www.freenas.org/
  • Devzero - Friday, December 4, 2009 - link

    Considering that I wouldn't need any of that functionality (firewall, torrenting or ZFS) on a NAS server, I don't really see what it matters?

    What would matter if getting it up and running with backup/sync, connected to my existing windows network, usable by any windows user, within half an hour. It needs to be stable, fast, self updating and with remote admin.
  • strikeback03 - Thursday, December 3, 2009 - link

    Do any of the WHS users here know how to set it to automatically copy the contents of a certain folder to one of the shared folders on the server? We have a WHS set up in our lab, and I currently use SyncToy to copy the photos we take with our microscope to the appropriate shared folder on the server, but it would be nice if this could be automatic.
  • webdawg77 - Thursday, December 3, 2009 - link

    The table on the last page lists the RAM twice so the total cost would be about $41 less.

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