Hi Inflatable, thanks as always for your great advice
Reasons [for NAS] for me are:
- I don't want a PC in the living room to be always on. Even though mine is most of the time, I want to turn it off without thinking about other dependencies.
- I don't want another potentially big noisy box to sit next to it (and trust me, having 5 or more disk in a single cabinet is going to make some sound).
My htpc is a dedicated laptop with reasonable grunt, tucks away with lid closed amongst HiFi Gear, runs very quietly, stays on 24/7 as a server and to record TV.
I have huge HiFi racks with for example gryphon monoblocks and mark levinson gear….so the little laptop is dwarfed lol. I have a fake wall built in the living room with pretty HiFI components in front of, and clutter and unsightly or potentially noisy gear sitting behind.
I once had the luxury of building a dedicated music room in an a previous house back in the old 'analogue' days so my wife is very understanding about this lesser lunacy. In that previous house we also had a formal living room sans any offensive electronic gear, no tv etc….heavens forbid if visitors saw such lack of refinement, lol. I think we used that living room about twice in 10 years ! Now when people enter our living area they get hit with massive speakers, Hi Fi gear, bigscreen TV and someone handing pizza and beers through the kitchen servery, ;-).
- The HTPC isn't a file server; reading/writing large or many files from/to it might interfere with playing music/movies. I found that in particular USB disks are bad in this regard.
- Possibility of running other software without putting stress on the HTCP. Usenet clients can run on most NAS devices, web servers, etc.
I use the HTPC as the server with MC the server software. I generally don’t work on the server/htpc when listening to music etc so hopefully minimal interference. I suppose the trick is to eliminate all other services or OS tasks and have minimal other software applications. Some are fanatical about this (not on this forum),some say the CPU and RAM should handle it, as music/video is not an intensive task.For labour intensive tasks,ripping, and for just convenience I use my powerful desktop pc.
Re building a server...I have heard of CAPS and must read more but essentially, are they not, a dedicated HTPC? You still need to provide storage somehow eg a mapped drive to a NAS or a locally attached usb/eSATA RAID.
I also realize I forgot to explain something about disk cabinets - sorry! The RAID capabilities in a NAS are not in a disk cabinet. If you want redundancy in the form of RAID-5 or RAID-6, your PC is going to have to provide that via software. Calculating parity is CPU intensive and could be another source of interference while playing music or movies, probably depends on how fast the HTPC is I suppose.
So, buying a locally attached RAID implemented-in-the-hardware device may be the way to go ?
- Convenience; expansion, replacing disks, online migration.
But this benefit would accrue to an external RAID array,NAS, or Drobo device ?
Let's say you go ahead to set up a 5-disk external cabinet on eSATA. Then after some time, one of the disks in the array fails. Your RAID-5 continues to work but how do you know which disk failed? I don't think an external cabinet will turn a LED red, if it has LEDs at all. I think I would break a little sweat, although I think I'd manage .
Ugh,yes. Do you start doing checkdsk or some other tester on each individual HDD.I think Drobo offered some kind of HDD monitoring and telling you which disc needs replacing with coloured lights, green good, red bad etc.
Last but not least, I really hope others will share their experiences too. There are guys out there with more experience in some of these areas than I have but above all, its always better to hear different sides.
Doesn't appear forthcoming. I suspect I may have offended some with my outspoken opinions regarding improving MC (making it more user friendly for beginners).
My vote would go to a NAS or as I'm going to do for myself, a home server.
If understanding this correctly it boils down to whether you need the DLNA server function or not and secondly whether you want/need to move the server and storage away from the living room. I know the second issue isnt a factor for me (whether form factor or noise)...I just don't know if/how adding a NAS native server will improve my world. If not, then maybe a locally attached RAID hardware device is what I now need for storage (tucked behind my fake wall).
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