Lost Password? No account yet? Sign up! Why bother?
  • Narrow screen resolution
  • Wide screen resolution
  • Auto width resolution
  • Increase font size
  • Decrease font size
  • Default font size

SmallNetBuilder - Small Network Help

  
Home arrow NAS arrow NAS Reviews arrow Qnap's TS-101 Aims High, But Falls Short
Qnap's TS-101 Aims High, But Falls Short Print E-mail
Jim Buzbee   
August 10, 2006

Setting Up

Completing the hardware setup was just a matter of plugging in the power and network cables and powering the unit up. When the TS-101 booted, it was silent except for the noise of the drive spinning. Nice. Qnap supports installation from both Windows and Macintosh systems, so I first turned to my MacBook Pro. The instructions documented a couple of ways for an Apple user to initially connect to the device, but I found both methods a bit confusing.

The instructions were trying to get across the point that you needed to bring up your browser and connect to the box on port 6000. The hard part was figuring out the IP address. I just did a broadcast-ping for my network: "ping 192.168.1.255". When I saw an unfamiliar IP address respond, I connected to it on the documented port of 6000 with my browser. Figure 2 shows the initial web page from the device.

Figure 2: TS-101 Main Menu

Figure 2: TS-101 Main Menu

I'm using a package from Parallels that allows me to run Windows XP simultaneously with Mac OS X, so I later tried out installing the TS-101 from Windows. In this case, Qnap provided a little utility that automatically found the device and walked through the initial setup, making the process a bit easier. Setting the box up with my browser under OS X stepped me through some standard initialization steps. Menus were presented for defining the name of the box, setting the administrator password, setting the network parameters, and so on.

When setting the time on the TS-101, I was pleased to see NTP support, as shown in Figure 3. There was also an option for selecting one of ten different languages for filename encoding.

Figure 3: Time setup screen

Figure 3: Time setup screen


Tags: NAS, Qnap, TS-101,

Related Articles:

Synology DS-106e: One very full-featured NAS
QNAP TS-209 Pro Review: Mini-server or NAS? You Decide!
Slideshow: Qnap TS-109 Pro
Maxtor builds performance, features into the Shared Storage II
Trendnet TS-S402 2-Bay SATA I/II Network Storage Enclosure Review
 

Most Read

 
 

Over At The Forums

D-Link DNS-323 Mysteries
Hello folks. I'm having issues with my Nas and looking for some thoughts. 1. The 323 gets recognised by Vista as a network device but...

Gigabit Network Help!
I have a gigabit NAS (D-link 323) that I have connected to a D-Link DGS-1005D gigabit switch. I then have my desktop connected to...

Synology DS-209+ review up!!
Looks real good. Now Netgear needs to play catchup and dump that old Infrant CPU for something more modern and powerful!! http://www.trustedreviews.com/networ...ion-DS-209-/p1

Real world NAS vs XP performance
I'm interested in a NAS like the Qnap TS 509 to store a lot of photo image files. We currently use a Windows XP SP3...

FCC OET Filings--November
For a device to utilize the radio spectrum in the United States, the FCC requires hardware manufacturers to apply for the relevant license. These publically-accessible...

Slideshows

NETGEAR ReadyNAS Pro Western Digital ShareSpace QNAP TS-509 Pro D-Link DNS-343 4-Bay Network Storage Enclosure Thecus N3200 RAID 5 NAS D-Link DIR-628 RangeBooster N Dual Band Router More

Win This!

Enter to Win!

You could win a Trendnet TEW-633GR Wireless N Gigabit Router and two TEW-621PC 300Mbps Wireless N-Draft PC Cards

Learn How!

 

Ldr:0.00162100791931, Rct:0.00565195083618, Sky:0.00736403465271, Tlink:0.0866460800171, TopPG:0.0867171287537, GQV:0.0868699550629 seconds to load.