Showing posts with label DLink. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DLink. Show all posts

Monday, March 21, 2011

D-Link DNS-343 NAS Box

D-Link DNS-343 NAS Box Video Clips. Duration : 6.48 Mins.


The D-Link ® 4-Bay Network Storage Enclosure (DNS-343) is the perfect way to store, share and store documents, music, videos and photos. D-Link tool less installation, you can enter up to 4 SATA cables drives1 without tools or fasteners. In addition, the DNS-343 is a scalable solution so that you start with one SATA hard disk drive (HDD) and up to 3 more as you grow.

Keywords: D-Link, DNS-343, NAS, Enclosure, bauer, computerv, compusa, tigertv, computertv

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Monday, September 13, 2010

D-Link 4-Bay Network Attached Storage Enclosure DNS-343

!1: Now is the time D-Link 4-Bay Network Attached Storage Enclosure DNS-343 Order Today!


Nice Design by :
D-Link
Over All Rating Reviews :

Great Deal :
$399.00
Date Created :
Sep 13, 2010 14:21:27


D-Link DNS343 4-Bay 4 3.5-Inch Bays, SATA, RAID 0/1/5, Gigabit Ethernet Port, USB Print Server Network Storage Enclosure



!1: Best Buy This is my third D-Link NAS. I bought a DNS-323 one year ago and it has been on ever since, serving up files reliably to my PC/Mac home network, downloading torrents, and streaming videos to my PS3/XBOX 360 (after installing Twonky Media Server). Based on my mostly positive experience with D-link products and price-to-features ratio, I decided to stick with the brand. I had wasted money on a Galaxy Metal Gear NAS, and read mostly lukewarm reviews for Netgear, Iomega, Linksys, and other makers. Other NAS devices like the DLNA-enabled Buffalo Technology LinkStation Live were attractive, but their price point or storage capacity was not. I need a large number of bays to create a centralized media server.

When I outgrew the DNS-323, I bought a DNS321 2-bay when I really should have applied that 0 toward this 4-bay product instead. I wanted to consolidate the half dozen 1 TB external drives I had sitting around and network them so I didn't have to keep plugging and unplugging USB cables when I wanted to retrieve files. My home network is heterogeneous and I also needed the ability to write large files (4 GB+) to the drives. FAT32 is the only mutually writable format across XP and Mac, but it has a 4 GB filesize limit, making it impractical for my movie storage needs. The D-Link uses a Linux file system (ext2 or ext3, your choice), so filesize concerns are now gone.

I've had this product for a week, and so far so good. The device can be configured from any web browser, so you don't need the CD (which is a Windows-only configuration app). I have 1 TB Hitachi and WD drives inside. Build quality is solid (made of thick aluminum). It's a brick of a device and looks quite durable.

For the price, I am not expecting world class security and many bells and whistles. I just need it for storing my personal files and media on my home network, and stream them, and for that, it works to my satisfaction. The iTunes server works very nicely. For file transfers, I FTP to it and do all my copying that way. For some reason, the Mac is a lot faster (20MB/sec) than copying from XP (10MB/sec). Vista is the worse, and I usually get 5MB/sec.

It would've been really great for D-link to include BitTorrent support for this, like the DNS-323. Maybe in a future firmware update.

All in all, I'm quite happy with this product. I don't place heavy expectations on it and don't demand ,500 server performance from a 0 device. It was the cheapest 4-bay NAS I could find for the features I wanted and gives great overall performance for the price. You can install telnet on it (look for Fonz's funplug) and open the device up to more hacking if you are so inclined.

Will update this review as I use the device more. on Sale!


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Thursday, August 26, 2010

D-Link DNS-343 NAS Enclosure

The D-Link® 4-Bay Network Storage Enclosure (DNS-343) is the perfect way to store, share, and safeguard your documents, music, videos, and photos. With the D-Link tool-less installation, you can easily insert up to 4 SATA drives1 without any tools or attaching any cables. Plus, the DNS-343 is a scalable solution, allowing you to start off with one SATA hard disk drive (HDD) and add up to 3 more as you grow.

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Thursday, August 19, 2010

D-Link 2-Bay Network Attached Storage DNS-321

±1±: Now is the time D-Link 2-Bay Network Attached Storage DNS-321 Order Today!


Nice Design by :
D-Link
Over All Rating Reviews :

Great Deal :
$109.00
Date Created :
Aug 19, 2010 07:21:07
The D-Link 2-Bay Network Storage Enclosure (DNS-321) is the perfect way to store, share, and safeguard your documents, music, videos, and photos. With the D-Link tool-less installation, easily insert up to two SATA drives1 without any tools or attaching any cables. Additionally, the built-in UPnP AV media server enables streaming of digital content to compatible network media players (such as those found in the D-Link MediaLounge product line) as well as popular media player applications used in computers.

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±1±: Best Buy I bought several of these for my extended relatives for protecting their personal photos, video, and music. I also bought it to change the way they send emails. As a RAID-1 NAS device, it delivers the protection that is so badly missing in every household. Combined with a web backup service, this device lets them sleep at night knowing that they have a RAID protected copy of data locally as well as another copy of data off site.

The setup of the DNS-321 is simple and it's integration with both Windows and Linux systems is easy. I didn't even use included Windows client, just a web browser is all you need to set things up. After setting my RAID, SMB, and NFS configurations, the NAS volume was easy to mount from every machine on my network. I tested these devices at my house using Windows XP and Ubuntu Linux before deploying them to my relatives, who had pretty much a Windows XP environment. They can be setup for DHCP or static IP, and because I am using them as webservers as well, I set them up as a static IP. This is a Linux based system and you can choose between EXT2 and EXT3 filesystems. I set mine up as EXT3 due to its improved resiliency. I also set it up to email me when certain events occur, such as disk failure, RAID-rebuild is complete, or volume is full. So when a problem occurs, I get an email to tell me that some action is required. I can remotely log into the DNS-321 using some of the hackable features, such as SSH to check things out.

Another goal I had with this device was a way to eliminate my family sending large attachments, such as photos and pdf documents. Since the DNS-321 and it's predecessor (DNS-323) have a cult following for hacking it for other functionality, it was easy to extend this Linux-based storage device into being a Lighttpd web server. I was able to easily configure it as a mail server, ssh server, and web server, with my favorite languages, such as PHP and python. So now my family emails web-links to files stored on the DNS-321, instead of fat email attachments, keeping their email "sent" boxes and their recipients "in" boxes from getting huge.

I think every household needs some kind of RAID protection and with the low price-point of the DNS-321, it was a no-brainer to buy this device. The flexibility of this device to also be a personal web-server for each of my relatives at their homes, also offered some added benefits that I've always wanted.

I totally recommend this product for anyone to use... geek or not. on Sale!

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