NAS
NAS Reviews
Simple, Handy, Slow: Buffalo DriveStation FlexNet Reviewed | Simple, Handy, Slow: Buffalo DriveStation FlexNet Reviewed |
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| Tim Higgins | |||||||||||
| December 03, 2008 | |||||||||||
IntroductionUpdated 12/8/2008: Updated Cons in At-A-Glance Table
If you're one of the people who wants a NAS that also can serve as an external USB drive, your options are pretty limited. The options have been LaCie's Ethernet Disk mini [reviewed] and Ethernet Big Disk [reviewed] or a few drive enclosures from lesser-known manufacturers. But now Buffalo has decided that this market is worth pursuing, with its DriveStation FlexNet. The fact that Buffalo has put the FlexNet into its DriveStation External (attached) drive product line signals the basic approach. Where the LaCies are NASes that also directly attach using a funky IP-over-USB mode, the FlexNet is a USB drive that also supports a SMB/CIFS 10/100 LAN connection via a roundabout USB - IDE - SATA bridge. In non-geek speak, this means that NAS performance is low and features are very basic. Figure 1 shows the FlexNet's front panel. You can connect both USB and Ethernet cables at the same time; you just switch modes using the Mode button.
Figure 1: Front panel controls and indicatorsFigure 2 shows the backside of the FlexNet with its controls and connectors. Note that the Ethernet port is 10/100 only. You'll see why when I run through the Performance tests.
Figure 2: Rear panel controls and indicatorsNote that there is no fan, so the FlexNet is very quiet. It draws only 12 W when active and 5 W when the "Eco Management" drive spin-down kicks in after 10 (default), 20, 30 or 60 minutes of idle time. Related Articles:Slideshow: Buffalo LinkStation Live LS-CHLLaCie Ethernet Disk mini V2: Refreshed and Ready to Rumble LaCie Ethernet Big Disk: Super size me Iomega Home Media Network Hard Drive Reviewed Slideshow - LaCie Ethernet Big Disk |
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