- Aug 25, 2001
- 55,554
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Now have a PX2-300D for $99, diskless. It has a screen, and what appears to be hot-swap caddies.
Unfamiliar otherwise with this unit, and what firmware features it may have. Anyone care to comment? No reviews yet @ Newegg.
Sold by the same seller as the other Lenovo/EMC units, "Centrix International".
www.newegg.com
Lenovo EMC™ PX2-300D Network Storage is a high performance business class desktop device, ideal for small-to medium-sized businesses and distributed enterprise locations like branch and remote offices, for content sharing and data protection.
OVERVIEW
• Supports up to 50 users
• Intel® Atom Dual Core CPU, 2 GbE NICs
• Maximum storage capacity of up to 8TB (2 x 4TB)
• Gigabit Ethernet connectivity
• Easy 3-Step Setup -- Simply plug into your router, power on, and download the integrated LenovoEMC Storage Manager software
• Anywhere in the world access with embedded cloud storage technology solutions
• Built-in Mindtree SecureMind video surveillance VMS solution, with one free camera license
• Built-in Milestone Arcus video surveillance VMS solution, with two free camera demo licenses
• User friendly web-based management interface; web interface accessible in 17 supported languages
• Supports PC, Mac, and Linux clients
• Compatible with most common backup software, web browsers, media devices, and computers
SPECIFICATIONS
• Desktop, compact, form factor
• Intel Atom Dual Core D525 CPU @ 1.8GHz
• 2GB DDR3 Memory
• 2 x 3.5” Hot-Swap SATA-II Hard Disk Drive Bays
• Server Class Easy-Swap Hard Drives with support for SSD drives
• JBOD, RAID 0, RAID 1
• 2 x RJ45 10/100/1000Mbps (GbE) Ethernet ports
• LAN standards: IEEE 802.3, IEEE 802.3u
• 1 x USB 3.0 port, 2 x USB 2.0 (to connect external HDD, UPS, Bluetooth dongle)
• Power consumption – 20 Watts (min) - 40 Watts (max), 65 Watts for 1.5s (peak)
NOTE: These values represent a fully loaded device with the highest capacity HDD. Values may vary with other configurations.
• Acoustic noise – 29.3 dBA maximum
• User interface localized for English, French, Italian, German, Spanish, Brazilian Portuguese, Russian, Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese, Korean, Japanese, Arabic, Hebrew, Turkish, Swedish, Dutch, and Polish.
• Network File Protocols Supported: CIFS/SMB/Rally (Microsoft), NFS (Linux/UNIX), AFP/Bonjour (Apple), FTP, SFTP, TFTP, HTTP, HTTPS, WebDAV, Windows DFS, SNMP.
CERTIFICATIONS
• Windows® Server 2008 R2 and Windows Server 2012
• VMware® vSphere ESX 5.1 iSCSI and NAS
• Citrix® XenServer™ 5.5, 5.6 (w/ MPIO), iSCSI & NFS
CONTENTS
• LenovoEMC™ PX2-300D Network Storage, Diskless 0TB
• Ethernet cable
• Power supply
• Printed Quick Start Guide
• Software Download (with): LenovoEMC™ Storage Manager software, User Help Documentation
(Hmm, this one claims to have a dual-core Atom CPU. Might not be so bad. Maybe if they still have them at the beginning of next month, I'll grab one to experiment with. BTW, most likely, these are EOL units as well.)
---
www.newegg.com
They have a 2-bay diskless for $59.99, and a 4-bay diskless for $109.99.
The 2-bay has a single Gigabit LAN port, the 4-bay has dual GigE LAN and a USB3.0 port.
I'm thinking of getting the 4-bay NAS unit, I already own several of the 2-bay units.
They're kind of useless to me now (upgraded my LAN to 2.5GbE/10GbE), but they were always reliable for me. They're SATAII. With updated firmware, the 2-bay takes as large as an 8TB WD Red NAS drive (in pairs), this may not be fully documented anywhere. I've not tried larger drives.
The firmware updates seem to be at an end, they were upgrading them faithfully every month or whenever there was a security issue discovered with the Linux-based code, but it appears that they are finally EOL. So, if you care about on-going support, these aren't for you.
They are fairly full-featured, and include Transmission (web-based Torrent Client), you can just copy the .torrent files to a directory, and it will automagically start downloading the files for you, you can check progress and control the client / seeding / etc., with a web page on the NAS. (For mass-downloading Linux ISOs.)
I've not dealt with this marketplace seller before that I know of, but from the pics, they appear to be new units.
Anyways, if you're new to NAS, and don't want to splash out a lot of money, and just want a place to back up your PCs and laptops, and share files on your LAN, one of these would likely be just about perfect for a "starter NAS unit". (I would also recommend QNAP, more full-featured, more updated, but also nearly 3-4X the price.)
Unfamiliar otherwise with this unit, and what firmware features it may have. Anyone care to comment? No reviews yet @ Newegg.
Sold by the same seller as the other Lenovo/EMC units, "Centrix International".
Are you a human?
Lenovo EMC™ PX2-300D Network Storage is a high performance business class desktop device, ideal for small-to medium-sized businesses and distributed enterprise locations like branch and remote offices, for content sharing and data protection.
OVERVIEW
• Supports up to 50 users
• Intel® Atom Dual Core CPU, 2 GbE NICs
• Maximum storage capacity of up to 8TB (2 x 4TB)
• Gigabit Ethernet connectivity
• Easy 3-Step Setup -- Simply plug into your router, power on, and download the integrated LenovoEMC Storage Manager software
• Anywhere in the world access with embedded cloud storage technology solutions
• Built-in Mindtree SecureMind video surveillance VMS solution, with one free camera license
• Built-in Milestone Arcus video surveillance VMS solution, with two free camera demo licenses
• User friendly web-based management interface; web interface accessible in 17 supported languages
• Supports PC, Mac, and Linux clients
• Compatible with most common backup software, web browsers, media devices, and computers
SPECIFICATIONS
• Desktop, compact, form factor
• Intel Atom Dual Core D525 CPU @ 1.8GHz
• 2GB DDR3 Memory
• 2 x 3.5” Hot-Swap SATA-II Hard Disk Drive Bays
• Server Class Easy-Swap Hard Drives with support for SSD drives
• JBOD, RAID 0, RAID 1
• 2 x RJ45 10/100/1000Mbps (GbE) Ethernet ports
• LAN standards: IEEE 802.3, IEEE 802.3u
• 1 x USB 3.0 port, 2 x USB 2.0 (to connect external HDD, UPS, Bluetooth dongle)
• Power consumption – 20 Watts (min) - 40 Watts (max), 65 Watts for 1.5s (peak)
NOTE: These values represent a fully loaded device with the highest capacity HDD. Values may vary with other configurations.
• Acoustic noise – 29.3 dBA maximum
• User interface localized for English, French, Italian, German, Spanish, Brazilian Portuguese, Russian, Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese, Korean, Japanese, Arabic, Hebrew, Turkish, Swedish, Dutch, and Polish.
• Network File Protocols Supported: CIFS/SMB/Rally (Microsoft), NFS (Linux/UNIX), AFP/Bonjour (Apple), FTP, SFTP, TFTP, HTTP, HTTPS, WebDAV, Windows DFS, SNMP.
CERTIFICATIONS
• Windows® Server 2008 R2 and Windows Server 2012
• VMware® vSphere ESX 5.1 iSCSI and NAS
• Citrix® XenServer™ 5.5, 5.6 (w/ MPIO), iSCSI & NFS
CONTENTS
• LenovoEMC™ PX2-300D Network Storage, Diskless 0TB
• Ethernet cable
• Power supply
• Printed Quick Start Guide
• Software Download (with): LenovoEMC™ Storage Manager software, User Help Documentation
(Hmm, this one claims to have a dual-core Atom CPU. Might not be so bad. Maybe if they still have them at the beginning of next month, I'll grab one to experiment with. BTW, most likely, these are EOL units as well.)
---
Are you a human?
They have a 2-bay diskless for $59.99, and a 4-bay diskless for $109.99.
The 2-bay has a single Gigabit LAN port, the 4-bay has dual GigE LAN and a USB3.0 port.
I'm thinking of getting the 4-bay NAS unit, I already own several of the 2-bay units.
They're kind of useless to me now (upgraded my LAN to 2.5GbE/10GbE), but they were always reliable for me. They're SATAII. With updated firmware, the 2-bay takes as large as an 8TB WD Red NAS drive (in pairs), this may not be fully documented anywhere. I've not tried larger drives.
The firmware updates seem to be at an end, they were upgrading them faithfully every month or whenever there was a security issue discovered with the Linux-based code, but it appears that they are finally EOL. So, if you care about on-going support, these aren't for you.
They are fairly full-featured, and include Transmission (web-based Torrent Client), you can just copy the .torrent files to a directory, and it will automagically start downloading the files for you, you can check progress and control the client / seeding / etc., with a web page on the NAS. (For mass-downloading Linux ISOs.)
I've not dealt with this marketplace seller before that I know of, but from the pics, they appear to be new units.
Anyways, if you're new to NAS, and don't want to splash out a lot of money, and just want a place to back up your PCs and laptops, and share files on your LAN, one of these would likely be just about perfect for a "starter NAS unit". (I would also recommend QNAP, more full-featured, more updated, but also nearly 3-4X the price.)
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