Feature Comparison

Here's a quick overview of the features of each unit. We will cover each in more detail on the following pages.

Feature Comparison
  Infrant Thecus Buffalo Intel QNAP LaCie Hammer
RAID levels 0, 1, 5, X-Raid 0, 1, 5, JBOD 1, 5, Span, JBOD 0, 1, 10, 5, Span 0, 1, 5, Span Span 0, 1, 10
RAID Migration Yes No No No No No No
Hot Plug Yes Yes No Yes Yes No Yes
Jumbo Frames Yes Yes Yes Yes No No No
Redundant Power No No No No Optional No No
Redundant NICs No Optional No Yes Yes No No
UPS support Yes No Limited (APC/OMRON) No Yes No No
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Protocol Support CIFS, NFS, AFP, FTP, HTTP, HTTPS, Rsync CIFS, NFS, AFP, FTP, HTTP, HTTPS CIFS, FTP, AFP CIFS, NFS, FTP CIFS, NFS, AFP, FTP, HTTP CFIS, AFP, FTP, HTTP No
Standard Config Information Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No
E-mail Alerts Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No No
SNMP Yes No No No Yes No Yes
DHCP Server Yes No No Yes Yes No No
Network Print Sharing Yes No No No Yes No No
Remote Replication Yes No Yes No Yes No No
CD/DVD Backup/Restore No No No No Yes No No
Includes Backup Client Yes No Yes 1 lic incl, $50 ea. No No No
Internal AV Scanning No No No No Optional No No
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AD Integration Yes Yes Yes No Yes Yes No
Internal Users & Groups Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No
Custom Shared Folders Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No
Quotas Yes No No No Yes No No
Snapshots Yes No No No No No No
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UPnP Support Yes Yes No No No No No
USB Device Support Printer, HD, UPS, Wireless NIC No HDD Yes CD/DVD, UPS, Printer HDD No
Streaming Services SlimServer, iTunes, UPnP, Home Media Streaming Server No No No No No No

Contenders and Configuration Hammer Z-Box
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  • yyrkoon - Friday, December 8, 2006 - link

    My problem is this: I want redundancy, but I also do not want to be limited to GbE transfer rates. I've been in communication with many people, via different channels (email, IRC, forums, etc), and the best results I've seen anyone get on GbE is around 90MB/s using specific NIC cards (Intel pro series, PCI-E).

    The options here are rather limited. I like Linux, however, I refuse to use Ethernet channel bonding (thus forcing the use of Linux on all my machines), or possibly a combination of Ethernet channel bonding, with a very expensive 802.11 a/d switch. 10GbE is is an option, but is way out of my price range, and 4GB FC doesn't seem to be much better. From my limited understanding of their product, Intel pro cards I think come with software to be used in aggregate load balancing, but I'm not 100% sure of this, and unless I used cross over cables from one machine, to another, I would be forced into paying $300usd or possibly more for a 802.11 a/d switch again. I've looked into all these options, plus 1394b firewire teaming, and SATA port multipliers. Port multiplier technology looks promising, but is Dependant on motherboard RAID (unless you shell out for a HBA), but from what I do know about it, you couldn't just plug it in to a Areca card, and have it work at full performance (someone correct me if I'm wrong please, Id love top learn otherwise).


    My goal, is to have a reliable storage solution, with minimal wait times when transferring files. At some point, having too much would be overkill, and this also needs to be realized.
  • peternelson - Tuesday, December 12, 2006 - link


    It sounds like your needs would be solved by using a fiber channel fabric.

    You need a FC nic (or two) in each of your clients, then one or more FC switches eg from Brocade or oems of their switches. Finally you need drive arrays to connect FC or regular drives onto the FC fabric.

    It isn't cheap but gives fantastic redundancy. FC speeds are 1/2/4 Gigabits per second.
  • yyrkoon - Tuesday, December 5, 2006 - link

    I've been giving Areca a lot of thought lately. What I was considering, was to use a complete system for storage, loads of disk space, with an Areca RAID controller. The only problem I personally have with my idea here is: how do I get a fast link to the desktop PC ?

    I've been debating back and forth with a friend of mine about using firewire. From what he says, you can use multiple firewire links, teamed, along with some "hack" ? for raising to get 1394b to 1000MBit/s, to achieve what seems like outstanding performance. Assuming what my friend says is accurate, you could easily team 4x 1394b ports, and get 500MB/s.

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