Review: Linksys NAS200

Posted by Ryan Baxter Sat, 04 Aug 2007 04:30:00 GMT

Last Sunday I purchased a Linksys NAS200 network attached storage (NAS) device and two Western Digital 500GB SATA drives hoping to solve my problem with backups and provide a shared storage solution for my home network. After a precursory examination of five NAS devices, I chose the Linksys NAS200 based upon its feature set, price, and the reputation of its predecessor, the Linksys NSLU2. The NAS200 boasts features such as:

  • Ethernet connected storage.
  • Dual SATA hard drive bays.
  • Two USB 2.0 ports for extra storage.
  • Internet FTP and HTTP access.
  • Built-in media server.
  • RAID 1 and 0 disk configuration.

Before buying this device I had been leaning heavily towards the D-Link DNS-323, but hoping the Linksys NAS200 would arrive on the market in time for my purchase. I mentioned previously that it was out of my character to buy bleeding edge hardware and I have to admit that I was a little nervous that the device would not work out of the box on my network. As a Linux user, I don’t think I’ll ever get over the anxiousness of buying new hardware.

The device was packaged well. The box pictured was merely a container for the much sturdier packaging material that housed the NAS200, a Quick Installation guide, CDROM, network cable, power supply, and some promotional material. I glanced briefly at the contents before proceeding to unhinge the plastic doors housing the NAS200’s drive bays. The doors were a little hard to open single-handed. Plastic clips found on either side of the doors must be pinched simultaneously to expose the bays.

Peering within the first bay, I was puzzled by the length of “ribbon” found inside. Not knowing what this was for, I consulted the manual located on the CD. To my surprise, the manual did not provide directions for hard drive installation. Printed on the edge of the ribbon was the word “Pull”. My wife giggled as she often does when she figures something out before me. The ribbons’ purpose is to aid in hard drive removal. Pulling the ribbon will eject the drive from its controller. Later, in the Quick Installation guide, I found a screenshot of the Setup Wizard depicting the ribbons proper use. Her assumption was correct. Reading the guide now, I’m impressed by the clarity of the screenshots found within. They are small, but readable.

With the drives installed, I placed the NAS200 on the shelf that was to become its new home. I then attached the device to my router with the provided Ethernet cable. You’ll need a longer cable if you plan on storing the device more than three feet from your router. I plugged in the AC adapter and turned on the device by pressing a small button located on the back panel near the AC input. The NAS200 chirped loudly signaling it had been turned on. The device’s internal speaker is loud and its tone is similar to that of a smoke detector. Some lights on the front of the device began blinking and the two that looked like disc platters lit up. At last I could turn on my computer.

Like the NAS200’s packaging, the CDROM was neatly branded. I didn’t have high hopes for running the Setup Wizard, but I did give it the college try. From the command line, I navigated to the CD and typed “wine Setup.exe” and cringed as several error messages appeared in my terminal. I didn’t bother going any further with this. Knowing the NAS200 would be assigned an IP address via DHCP from my router, I launched Firefox and navigated to http://192.168.1.102. I felt a small measure of relief watching the NAS200’s administrative page load within my browser. This feeling was soon found fleeting as I attempted to log in. The default username and password listed in the manual did not work. A few curses later, I remembered the default login (admin / admin) used by my Linksys router and gave that a try. It worked.

Feeling elated, I navigated through the remaining administration within minutes. I first chose “Firmware Upgrade” from the list of options. I was slightly disappointed when clicking “Check for Upgrade” opened a new browser window and directed me to the Linksys.com website. In the days of Web 2.0 you shouldn’t have to search for firmware updates and install them manually. Updates should download and install with one click. I found the NAS200 on Linksys’ website, but at the time of this writing no firmware updates had been published. Screenshots of the Linksys NAS200’s administration interface can be found below:

12345678910

Formatting the hard drives took little time. The “Disk Utility” section contained a set of simple controls for both drive formatting and the running and scheduling of Scandisk. I had prepared myself to wait at least a half hour for the formatting of two 500GB SATA drives, but only sat and watched the progress bar for about 5 minutes. Likewise, the “Disk Configuration” menu was also simple and configuring my device for RAID 1 mirroring was as easy as clicking a radio button. Soon after, my 1TB of raw storage became 465.29GB of mirrored drive space.

Once the drives were configured, I quickly changed the admin password and set a disk quota for guest users. Under “System Options”, I gave the device a more suitable name and assigned it a static IP address. I then created user accounts for myself and my wife. When creating user accounts, access to the device’s Download Manager can be set. I don’t remember reading about this feature within the product’s description before purchasing it. Not that I’m complaining, because the functionality is pretty cool. Basically it acts as an autonomous downloader. You provide the URLs, and it does the work. This single feature could end up saving money on my electric bill as I oftentimes leave my computer running all night to download large files. I don’t know the exact numbers, but I feel confident in saying that the Linksys NAS200 draws less power than my desktop PC.

To complete the installation I did a quick training session with my wife. She now knows to click Places -> Network within Gnome to find our network devices. Double-clicking “Thorbardin” (Yes, I was a Dungeon Master) displays her private folder and the public share entitled, “PUBLIC DISK”. Not being particularly fond of screaming caps, I tried to rename the folder, but was prompted with the following error message.

Unlike some other NAS devices, the Linksys NAS200 is quiet. I have to be standing within a foot of the device to hear any noise. The noise that does emanate from its internal fan is not of the jet engine variety. The fan within the NAS200 emits a low-pitched whir. I’m still quite impressed by this as my second story apartment is extremely hot. Its probably a good thing that the device has an operating temperature of 41 to 104ºF (5 to 40ºC). The surface of the NAS200 is not cool to the touch, but it is not particularly hot either. I can faintly feel air being pushed by the fan through the tiny holes dotting all sides of the device. That is a good sign.

I certainly feel more comfortable now that I have the Linksys NAS200 integrated into my backup strategy. With the NAS200 configured as RAID 1, I’ve all but eliminated the potential for single disk failure. My wife and I are already benefiting from the advantages of having a networked storage solution. We can finally share family pictures without the hassle of peer-to-peer file sharing between our computers. The NAS200’s product packaging and administration controls are both well designed and the device itself appears of exceptional quality. Any anxiety I had about the device communicating on my home network was unjustified. It works well with Linux and will undoubtedly perform just as well with Windows.

Comments

Leave a response

Avatar
i am no banker Comment_bubble 2 days later:
Nice review (and photos), have you try to pull one of the disk out to see if the NAS will continue, to test RAID1? does it have email alert feature if one disk failed? hope you don't mind me refer to your review when others ask about review for this product. Because at Linksys forum some people are asking for review but couldn't found one...until now. cheers,
Avatar
goodbender@gmail.com Comment_bubble 2 days later:
I pulled one of the drives from mine for the raid 1 test. The status light flashes and the system status page indicates the failure. But you can continue to work with the remaining drive. It will rebuild once the 2nd drive is restored, takes several hours, all the while you can continue to work with the drive that didn't 'fail'. There is a system log screen that lists each event (including the sucessfull rebuild).
Avatar
Nas200 fan Comment_bubble 3 days later:
Hi Ryan Nice job on the review. One thing I learned is that the NAS200 comes with a free year of TZO Dynamic DNS bundled with the product. In the system options page I clicked the signup with TZO.COM and it birngs you to the TZO page that offers a free year with the product.
Avatar
Ryan Baxter Comment_bubble 3 days later:
i am no banker - Thanks! I haven't tried testing the RAID configuration yet, but it sounds like goodbender has had luck with it. Linksysinfo.org has also linked to the review. Check out their site for other Linksys related news.

Nas200 fan - Thanks! I missed that feature in my review. I'll have to check it out.
Avatar
LordFlux Comment_bubble 3 days later:
What are the transfer speeds like when moving data over to the NAS?
Avatar
Ryan Baxter Comment_bubble 3 days later:
LordFlux - My home network is still Cat 5 so my max throughput on the wire is 100 Mbit/s. I copied 8GB (7500 files) of pictures to the NAS200 in about an hour. This wasn't a scientific experiment so your results may vary.
Avatar
Anonymous Comment_bubble 3 days later:
Average thougphput is below 10mb /s in general for NAS devices of these types. The only one exceeding and reaching up to 35mb/s is the Thecus running a celeraon 1500mhz cpu... It costs more too though :-) I prefer 4 disk based anyway. Even with NAS 2 disk based, you run out of space very fast... (HD files)
Avatar
Ryan Baxter Comment_bubble 3 days later:
Thanks Anonymous. Here is a chart that compares performance specs of popular NAS devices. Check it out.
Avatar
i am no banker Comment_bubble 4 days later:
I can't wait until the community get together and add some "plug-in" feature into is box. Like other Linux based NAS. cheers,
Avatar
HD Comment_bubble 4 days later:
Does the NAS200 allow printer sharing via it's USB ports like the Maxtor Shared Storage drives do?
Avatar
Ryan Baxter Comment_bubble 4 days later:
i am no banker - I'd like to see a BitTorrent client added to the Download Manager. It'd be nice if I could just drag-and-drop torrents to a shared folder and have them download.

HD - I'm not sure. I don't have the manual in front of me at the moment either. My guess is no, but I'll check later. This feature would be nice. I'm tired of my old LPT printer.
Avatar
HD Comment_bubble 4 days later:
I'm currently running a Maxtor Shared Storage (MSS) 200 and love it. It replaced a desktop that acted as our file/print server. It backs up our PCs and acts a server for our photos via a public shared folder. It also shares our HP LaserJet 1012 for us.

I like the idea of a RAID 1 for this type of device and have been waiting for the NAS 200 to come out, but lack of printing support may just kill it for me. Or I'll have to run both the MSS and the NAS 200 on my network... Let me know what you find out.
Avatar
Ryan Baxter Comment_bubble 6 days later:
HD - I specifically chose this device for RAID 1 disk configuration. I'd rather error on the side of paranoia than have a disk go bad and lose files. I couldn't find anything within the manual about using the two USB ports for anything other than additional storage space. However, given the community backing of the NSLU2, I wouldn't be surprised if print sharing soon becomes a new feature.
Avatar
Simon Comment_bubble 8 days later:
Printing. No builtin printer/scanner support but this is a new product. It has a 486 clone chip inside, so wait a short while for people to hack a replacement firmware, just like with the NSLU2. First they made a small extension to the stock firmware and then gave the option of a Debian.

With a replacement firmware expect printer support via SMB (Windows file/printer sharing) et al. Scanner will take a little longer but not impossible.

Avatar
arf Comment_bubble 12 days later:
Can it act as a small webserver ?? Nothing complicated, but pictures and all ?
Avatar
Ryan Baxter Comment_bubble 13 days later:
arf - It cannot do that at this time, but this is another feature that I'd expect the community to implement sooner or later.
Avatar
Simon Comment_bubble 13 days later:
Webserver. As with the NSUL2 ("slug") there was an active community supporting and hacking it. I see no reason why this should be any different. However it will be quite stupid because the chip is a 486 running at 44 BogoMips. That having been said it should run an adequate web server: cherokee et al or Apache with lots of swapping. So you could get SQL, PHP etc. A static site takes hardly any processor/RAM so it should be fine for that.

We will have to wait for the hackers to get to on this product. It is available in the USA but the rest of the world will have to wait.

Once it has been cracked expect the "full" range of Linux apps to be available. GUI stuff isn't needed, so won't get ported. So typically expect small server stuff: HTTP servers, CUPS, PHP, SQL, SANE, rsync et al. Also various media players.

Avatar
Mike Comment_bubble 13 days later:
Are the hard drives used with the NAS200 supposed to be internal or external SATA drives?
Avatar
Elim Comment_bubble 14 days later:
Like the review, but it left me hanging in the wind. Obviously, or at least it should have been obvious, most would have like to have known the transfer speeds. Well, I do own this device and I am totally disappointed with the transfer speeds. Mine ranges from 1.55MB/sec to 3.55MB/sec. 5.30GB transfer took me 40mins and it was only 5 files. Imagine loading 500GB at one time...takes several days. As a media server, too much effort will be expended if data becomes corrupted and a rebuild or reformat becomes necessary.
Avatar
Simon Comment_bubble 14 days later:
Mike, The SATAs are internal. The reason SATAs are used is because they have a standardised connector layout that can be pushed in to the end of the bay. Also SATA is better defined, so the NAS can expect to work better, than PATA. The drives are recovered by using the ribbons.

Elim, You are getting 20Mb/s which is not unreasonable for a Windows machine. Check the speed of your PC to see if it can transfer over the network any faster.

The NAS200 configured with RAID1 should be very reliable, far more than any Windows PC could hope to be.

Avatar
Ryan Baxter Comment_bubble 14 days later:
Elim - Sorry to leave you hanging. Did you read my comments? Check out the NAS Charts at smallnetbuilder.com.
Avatar
MikeP Comment_bubble 15 days later:
Ryan, are you still able to access with the new administrative password? I can't get into the admin area any more. This seems to be a problem that others are having - per the forum. I'm in the middle of a Live Chat with the Linksys support right now. We aren't getting very far.
Avatar
MikeP Comment_bubble 15 days later:
Is anyone concerned about how hot the drives get? I've just taken a drive out after running for a week (to try to reset the admin password). Only one drive in the system but it is very hot. I wonder if the temperature will reduce the reliability?
Avatar
Ryan Baxter Comment_bubble 15 days later:
MikeP - Apparently I did not change my admin password as stated in my review, because I just tried to log in and only the default password worked. Strange. I just changed the password to something more secure and tried again. The new password worked. I don't seem to be having the same problem as you've described, though I could have swore that I changed the password when I first set up the NAS.
Avatar
i am no banker Comment_bubble 16 days later:
FYI: the small net builder came up with its review and speed test. http://www.smallnetbuilder.com/content/view/30127/75/ cheers,
Avatar
i am no banker Comment_bubble 16 days later:
Ryan, I am reading about your "Subversion on Windows in Five Steps" do you know that for NAS DNS-323 they hacked it so it can support SVN. let's hope they can do it for NSA200.
Avatar
Ryan Baxter Comment_bubble 17 days later:
i am no banker - I did read that. I don't think I put it in my original spec though. It'd be nice, but I'm quite happy using SVN provided by my host, dreamhost.com.
Avatar
Gary Comment_bubble 17 days later:
As a workaround for the fact that you can't rename PUBLIC DISK, I replaced it instead. I created a new shared directory and gave all users read/write access to it, then took away read/write access to PUBLIC DISK. I did this not only because screaming capitals are annoying, but also to avoid the problem that /etc/fstab doesn't really like share names with spaces in them.
Avatar
Ryan Baxter Comment_bubble 17 days later:
Thanks Gary. I'll give that a try!
Avatar
Wachovia Geek Comment_bubble 20 days later:
Thanks for all the good information and sharing of experience Ryan! When formatting the drives, can you choose the file system e.g. ReiserfS, NTFS, etc) Is there multiple choices available? Thanks in advance..
Avatar
Fred Comment_bubble 20 days later:
I'd like to be able to put my own html into the home/admin page. Can anybody direct me to a how-to or tutorial for such an operation?
Avatar
Ryan Baxter Comment_bubble 20 days later:
Wachovia Geek - Thanks! Hmmm... I can't remember what my options where when I formatted my drives. I logged in to the NAS to check and was prompted with an "All data will be erased! Are you sure?" dialog box. I chickened out. Does anybody else know what file systems are available?

Fred - Check out linksysinfo.org. There may be someone there who knows.
Avatar
Fred Comment_bubble 20 days later:
Ryan, It didn't ask me to select a file system, only the arrangement of the hard drives - RAID 0, RAID 1, JBOD, or Separate Drives
Avatar
Gary Comment_bubble 21 days later:
There are no options for filesystems for the internal drives. They are formatted in xfs (with a small separate partition for user data, etc.). I understand from reading that USB drives can be formatted in FAT16 or FAT32 (NTFS is still read-only). I'm sure that once the box is properly hacked, modifying the filesystms as well as the HTML will be possible.
Avatar
Ryan Baxter Comment_bubble 21 days later:
Fred, Gary - Thanks! I've almost forgotten about the NAS. It sits next to my router and just works. That's probably a good sign.
Avatar
kartiq Comment_bubble 28 days later:
Hi, great you took the plunge! I have been looking up NAS devices past 3 months as well, I saw the Linksys at a Comp Expo in Singapore, it's pretty decent I thought but the sales rep told me I cannot use it on a mac platform, I see no reason why as long as my router can see it and I can see my router! Is my assumption correct? Can this be used over mac platform connected to a wireless router with an ethernet port and NAS support. Thanks!
Avatar
Ryan Baxter Comment_bubble about 1 month later:
kartiq - I have not used the NAS200 with a Mac, but you should be able to configure it as long as you have a web browser and accessing the network shares shouldn't be an issue with Samba. I'll try to borrow a Mac from a friend and give it a test.
Avatar
Pauline Comment_bubble about 1 month later:
kartiq: like Ryan Baxter says it should work with your Mac if you use Windows file sharing (SMB). The setup CD won't work, but that won't be any great loss because they are rarely helpful. As Ryan says just configure it via your favourite web browser. What is of concern is the possible routing of SMB. It prefers to be on only one IP segment, so it needs some tweaking of smb.conf to get it to work with two different IP# ranges. But if what you mean is "can it be connected on a LAN" then of course. This presupposes that your LAN, whether cat5 and/or WiFi, actually works. If SMB is fine for you then it will work straight from the box. If you specifically want apple file sharing you may want to wait for a hacked firmware to include netatalk.
Avatar
RedneckReg Comment_bubble about 1 month later:
Does anyone know if the NAS200 has an undelete feature or if an undelete procedure exists using 3rd party tools? I currently have a Linksys DNS-323 which I have been happy with until my wife deleted some files. We could not restore the files even with a 3rd party tools that reads EXT2 file systems.
Avatar
Pauline Comment_bubble about 1 month later:
RedneckReg: Undeletion in ext2/3 is non-trivial. Because ext2 et al make efficient use of the disk the deleted files and their blocks are hard to recover. On average this is an advantage because the disk works more efficiently and never needs defragging like lesser filesystems. In unixland we like to think that we are cleverer and we don't delete files we didn't mean to, except we actually do.

To undelete is a pain:

  1. get shell access
  2. unmount the affected filesystem
  3. make a temporary filesystem on a different device
  4. apply some tools to recover the "lost" files.

Note that these tools take care and competence to use. If you really must recover the files get an expert to do it for you.

You can emulate a trash-can by creating a folder called TrashCan (or something like that) and dragging unwanted files to there. When you have got your final answer you pull the chain.

Avatar
Ryan Baxter Comment_bubble about 1 month later:
Pauline - Thanks for the thorough answer!
Avatar
friday@yahoo.com Comment_bubble about 1 month later:
Has anyone tried the uPnP media server? I'm wondering if it will serve up audio/video to my PS3 for listening in the living room without my PC running...
Avatar
Gary Comment_bubble about 1 month later:
From SGI's website (SGI invented xfs): Q: Does the filesystem have an undelete capability? There is no undelete in XFS. Always keep backups.
Avatar
Andi Comment_bubble about 1 month later:
Dear Ryan! Thanks for your test! I am looking for a reliable and yet handy NAS. My impression is, that this field ist relatively new and therefore there are many products that are not fully developed.. let's put it that way. However, the first impression of the LinkSys NAS200 was very good. (Open source firmware, feature set, etc.) There is one thing that kept me busy all night: After set-up as RAID1(all new, no existing data on any drive, etc.) and formatting the NAS200 starts a rebuild. See http://members.kabsi.at/losti/screen.JPG for a screenshot. The disc LEDs on the front panel flash alternatly. This makes no sense and can't be abandoned etc. There IS no data to rebuild, so why?? The drives (ST3500630AS) get EXTEMLY hot and it would take a long time for this rebuild to complete (~5 mins per %). No RAID system (e.g. Promise TX2300) used before ever showed such behaviour. Did you experience this rebuild after set-up too or do I have defective unit? Your feedback (or of anyone else) would be highly apprechiated! Andi
Avatar
dkjunior Comment_bubble 2 months later:
Ryan - thanks for the excellent review! I never used NAS devices before, so I wonder what will happen if I put NTFS formatted drive with data on it into this thing. Will it work, or I'll have to reformat it from web interface first?
Avatar
NESJumpman Comment_bubble 3 months later:
Do you know if the NAS200 has any sort of remote shut down capabilities? So when the power goes out and the APC kicks in, can the computer issue a shutdown? Or does the NAS handle sudden loss of power gracefully?
Avatar
Pauline Comment_bubble 3 months later:
dkjunior,

This box needs to format the disk itself, it uses XFS. If you really need the data on the old disk then temporarily move it somewhere else, format and then re-copy.

NESJumpman,

Since XFS is a journalling filesystem a total power loss is unlikely to hurt it. If you need more nines either use UPS or a better box.

Auto-shutdown: you will have to wait for the hackers for an alternate firmware, just like with the NSLU2. However if you don't mind a bit of Linux hackery you could install your own shutdown scripts.

Avatar
phynixx01<aht>yaho_.ca Comment_bubble 3 months later:
I just plugged the NAS200 in and set it up using my Mac with *almost* no issues. The web interface works just fine with Firefox 2.0.0.8/OSX 10.4.10 and I was able to set up all of the basic options w/out issue. The first and only problem I've had is with changing the admin password. I've got a serious problem with admin/admin so I sought to change the password to something a bit more secure. I've so far tried changing it twice w/out success. Each time I've attempted a change the UI accepts the new password just fine. However when it prompts me to re-login with the new password I can't get in. It's made some sort of change to the system though b/c the old password doesn't work either. Has anybody else had similar problems?
Avatar
Francis Comment_bubble 3 months later:
Hi Ryan, I am planning to install this in my office and was wondering what they will see from Network places? Can I map this as a Network drive and assign a drive letter? Do I have to install it's software for it to be discovered in my network? Thanks! Francis
Avatar
Ryan Baxter Comment_bubble 3 months later:
Francis - I just mapped a network drive to one of the shares on my NAS200 this evening. You'll have no problem with this. You don't need the software, but if you're on a Windows network, then why not? Good luck!
Avatar
XiOn Comment_bubble 3 months later:
I want to replace the fan to lower the noise level. Does anybody know how to open the case?
Avatar
Mac dude Comment_bubble 3 months later:
I set mine up with the LVM on 2 Seagate 750 GB drives, once configured it only showed 392 GB available. :( Reconfigured with RAID 0 (Stripped) and Boom 1.396 Terabytes appeared. While I am going to primarily use this as a large back up device, I may convert it into Raid 1 before much time goes by. MAC seems fine with the current configuration but performance seems a bit slow. Don't care about noise at all here as it is in my network closet :)
Avatar
JoeSpin Comment_bubble 3 months later:
Nice blog and your password comment saved my ass. I'm constantly amazed that companies like this make these obvious errors. To reiterate for search engines, the password is WRONG and if you LOST PASSWORD and CANNOT LOGIN to Linksys NAS200, the username/password is admin/admin. Also, everyone note the hard-drives get HOT like the fires of HELL, it can't be good for the disks, so I plan to keep things there I can afford to lose. Anyone who is serious about NAS might consider Linksys/Cisco's NSS product line, it looks nice.
Avatar
Ryan Baxter Comment_bubble 3 months later:
Joe - Thanks! Glad it helped.
Avatar
James Comment_bubble 5 months later:
I never read the manual. I just plugged it in. I expected the password and user name would be admin. I actually plugged my old NAS into the usb port of this one. Anyone use this thing to stream with XBMC?
Avatar
The Dude Comment_bubble 5 months later:
Hi Ryan! Great blog indeed! I just got home from the shops... Been looking around for 3 days already. A lot of China products could provide the simple features of a NAS but the NAS200 is justifiably affordable and more flexible. Yes, it is just a matter of time before the firmware is hacked and fully utilized. Probly another trip to another electronics area before I get one. I read about your download manager option. Nothing is mentioned about this in the literature. Is the NAS200 capable of downloading torrents? I currently use Azureus as my download manager. Could you shed more light on how to use this little baby on torrents? Do I just enter the tracker URL into the URL space of the NAS200 and it downloads the file directly or do I just direct the file to the nas-located folder, after confirming it in Azureus, and it directs the file there automatically even when the PC is off? =) Thanks.
Avatar
Ryan Baxter Comment_bubble 5 months later:
The Dude - Thanks! No torrents at the moment. I haven't searched for any firmware hacks yet, because I use mine mainly for back-ups and as a file server. I'll do some looking around when I get a chance. I'm in the middle of moving this week. What a PIA!
Avatar
The Dude Comment_bubble 5 months later:
I hear ya!!! It would be good to get some help from a logistics company, specially if you are moving fragile and expensive stuff.. Then have them insure them. :p Regarding the torrent download via the download manager, I think I have an idea of how to do it. But it would only give you opportunity to download 1 torrent at a time, since there is only 1 http: input line. Please validate if this is correct guys: 1. Go to a torrent host website and pick out your target torrent for download. 2. Click on it to initiate download. 3. When it asks you to "save" the download icon (so you could use azureus of other torrent clients for manual trigger) copy the source location of the torrent into the http: line of your nas200. If this contains the actual lcoation of the torrent in the server, the nas should be able to download this automatically. I cannot validate this as of the moment as I still don't have my nas200. But soon! :) Good luck with your transfer Ryan...
Avatar
dan Comment_bubble 7 months later:
I just pruchased a N200 last night. This is my 3rd home NAS device... I'm only getting 3.3Mbit/s from a USB to the NAS200 over the 100Mbit link which is a show stopper. I'm sad to say I'm taking the device back and getting a another USB enclosure for my 1TB drive. I sure wish netapp would get into the home market, I manage 30 Netapps at work, and Ontap at home with a snapmirror amd smapshots feature would rock!
Avatar
Nick in Portland Comment_bubble 7 months later:
I am really interested in this device. I have been reading all over the place and the only real complaint seems to be the speed. I can live with slower transfer speeds, its not like I am planning on running my OS off of it or something. I am however very interested in streaming High Def videos over the network to my XBOX 360. Anybody know if this box can handle that? I have read that it can handle non-HD vids and music with no issues. Also if I am watching videos on another media player can my PC access it at all? I thought that I read that only one device can be connected to it at a time. Thanks to anybody that can provide some assistance. :-)
Avatar
David Comment_bubble 8 months later:
The password issue mentioned where admin/admin no longer works does anyone have a solution? Setup: NAS 200 which I setup using a Win XP machine. I have now replaced the hard drive on that machine and am running Fedora. Problem: File access via http works fine for both machines. File access via explorer only on Win XP. Admin access only from Win XP Any advise greatly received
Avatar
Nikolay (SIRIYS) Comment_bubble 8 months later:
Hi ( sorry for my english ) i have NAS200 from 5 days , and a have debian + apache2 + php5 + myslq-server + proftpd + ssh + support for ext2/3 fs on it . it takes long time for me , but i did it without removing firmware ( last version that supports telnet ) if somebody want to know how i did it . please write me an e-mail (cupuyc@gmail.com). I hope soon i will have a time to write a ( HOW TO ) somewhere in the internet . next thing i'm going to try with this ( NAS200 ) is to set gammu and bluetooth , to use it as SMS-gateway , so for me it will be a perfect server .
Avatar
Erasmuz Comment_bubble 10 months later:
I would also be interested to know if the network speed of this device can handle streaming video to other devices? TV shows (350MB), Movies (1GB) & High-Def Movies (4GB+) streamed to another computers for example?
Avatar
hifi_guy Comment_bubble 10 months later:
While the rather slow transfer rates can be annoying when copying large files to or from the NAS200, it should still be quick enough for video streaming. I get (roughly estimated) 5-6 MB/s when moving files, which would be equivalent to 40mbps, which should be enough even for HD video streams. Mind you, I haven't tried this (I only use it for audio streaming) and my assumption may be totally wrong. For those of you with difficulties logging in as admin: The NAS200 seems to be picky regarding the browser and possibly the OS, especially if you are using a Mac. Try different browsers! I had the same problem (unable to login as admin with admin/admin) in the beginning and finally succeeded only with the last version of Netscape (of all things...). After I updated to OS X 10.4.11 and Firefox 2.0.0.14 i've never again had any problem. What I really don't like about the NAS200: Even though it's really noisy (mine definitely is...there seems to be some sample-to-sample variation) it still seems to provide inadequate cooling to the HDs. As has been written before...the discs get surprisingly hot.
Avatar
MikeB Comment_bubble 10 months later:
The password problems have not been fixed. I was not able to access the Advanced Functions after a clean setup with a new drive. I returned the NAS for exchange before I found this forum so I never tried the admin/admin option... Has anyone out there succeeded in streaming media from the NAS to an XBox360?
Avatar
Alfredo Hyde Comment_bubble 11 months later:
precollect clearcole nomina inermous holochoanitic noncruciform tysonite antidote http://www.springer.com/east/home?SGWID=5-102-70-1025304-detailsPage=journal|description|description >Inventiones Mathematicae http://www.leaseourhouses.com/
Avatar
Vassili Comment_bubble 11 months later:
hey guys, just want your opinion about this NAS200. Is is good when it com to transfer rate? Hows the Speed? Thanks
Avatar
Ryan Baxter Comment_bubble 11 months later:
MikeB - I don't own any streaming media devices, but a comment left on another post of mine suggests that media can be streamed from a NAS200 to PS3.

Here is a list of UPnP-enabled clients that work with TwonkyMedia. I have no idea what version of Twonky is embedded in the NAS200. Does anyone else have experience with this?