
You will notice in the B&H link above they also sell them paired with a bunch of different HD options, including 2 x 14TB.

I only see one Seagate HD that is not compatible, and it is specific for surveillance. I have never had any issue with any popular HDs not being compatible. Synology has an extensive list of compatible drives here. B&H carries them, as do New Egg and many reputable online vendors.Īs for drives.not sure where you found that info. Never been an issue for me, mostly because I am not close to any big tech vendors anyways. Yes.Synology is not very common in brick and mortar stores. I have had good luck with the WD red drives in several NAS boxes and attached storage arrays. Nope.Server is no longer what it used to be, so no benefit as a NAS (it still does a couple of other things, but nothing file serving specific). PROS: Lower cost, more compact, dedicated headless, more functionality and flexibility The 220+ is likely cheaper and is more compact (one box, one plug, etc.). If buying gear, one would need both the Mini and an external storage box.

Ability to swap drives on the fly, including increasing a volume size without erasing and reformatting.Built-in RAID redundancies (for multi-drive models).Web interface, no monitor needed, no remote desktop setup needed.If starting fresh and buying hardware, I still vote for the Synology. If you have a Mini to spare, this is a pretty good option. Click to is no longer what it used to be, so no benefit as a NAS (it still does a couple of other things, but nothing file serving specific).įor file sharing, you don't need anything extra, you can use any Mac as a local file server with no additional software.
