Categories
For the Geeks

Beyond Saving My Life And Into The World Of ReadyNAS!

My New Netgear ReadyNAS!

A Vision at the IT Show

I had a vision last Sunday.

As I inched my way through a huge crowd inside the air-conditioned subterranean shopping mall connecting the IT Show to where I had parked my car, I could see the grey sky and heavy rain through the large glass windows. We were travelling at point zero zero zero zero one kilometer per hour, breathing in the humidity of sweat and rain.

At one vantage point—on top of an escalator, about four meters above the crowd—I saw faces.

Lots of faces.

So many faces looking in my direction.

At that moment, I had a vision.

I want to be a rock star. And these are my audience, their faces full of anticipation.

My friends and I looked at each other, shook our heads, and said: They have no idea what they are getting themselves into.

But such is the price of attending an IT Show.

I have never seen that many people in our convention and exhibition center. Not even during the Motor Show, when there are usually plenty of hot babes around. I was actually scared coming down the escalators. What if there was—touch wood—a pile-up at the bottom? Sardines heading into cans on a non-stop production line.

Where is that bloody emergency stop button?

None.


When Hard Disks Attack

Sunday morning I woke up relatively early, planning to pay Azeroth a visit.

Bam!

My hard disk crashed.

And of course it crashed on the last day of the IT Show.

Panic.

I called my friends at the last minute to see who could accompany me. Phew. Those Maxtor hot backup devices really did save my life, just as advertised. All my data was safe.

I only wish Bill Gates had the brain size of Steve Jobs and gave PC users a Time Machine like Apple did.

Now it was time to replace my crashed 500GB hard disk and reinstall the operating system.

Fun time.

Not.


The NAS Idea

Maybe this was a sign.

Maybe I should go beyond merely saving my life. Maybe I needed my own home network storage—with industrial-grade reliability—so I could pull out or jam in any hard disk anytime and my data would still be intact.

Fortunately for me, TK and my photography buddy Mat could make it.

Time for shopping.

Except it wasn’t really shopping for them. They knew exactly what they wanted, knew the strike price, and only needed to locate the right booth, buy the item, and leave.

I, on the other hand, had no idea what exactly to buy.

Exactly.

I only had a concept—like most things in my life.

That’s all.

Mat has been using the Netgear ReadyNAS NV+ for years and loves it. TK was planning to get the smaller version. He told me, “Since you have tons of CDs like me, you’ll need a Squeezebox and this.”

OK, sold.

If I got stuck figuring out how to use the device, at least I had a few numbers to call.

Wait…

What the heck is a Squeezebox?!


Digitising 800 CDs

Imagine this: all 800 of my CDs digitized into the free lossless audio codec format (a.k.a. FLAC), ready to be streamed into a Squeezebox that connects directly to my hi-fi.

Any song from my CD collection available with a touch of the remote control.

Hi-fi sound quality.

My new toy (pictured above) can hold up to four hard disks. Right now I have installed three 1TB Western Digital GreenPower drives. With the built-in data redundancy, I have about 1.8TB of space accessible from within my home network.

Gadgets these days are going green.

So is the new D-Link switch I bought that day.


The Price of ReadyNAS

I could have bought two of the latest Nikon 50mm lenses with the money I spent.

Oh well.

There is a price to pay for entering the world of ReadyNAS.

TK and Mat told me I could do a lot more with it.

We shall see.

31 replies on “Beyond Saving My Life And Into The World Of ReadyNAS!”

Chuang Shyue Chou – You know buddy, I have no clue. My friend TK knows a friend who has a machine with a robotic arm. So you just need to dump the pile of CDs into it and the robotic arm will then pick the discs out one and one and encode them automatically. I don’t have that luxury of course.

More the reason why if I wish to invest that kind of time, I need a format that last.

800 albums if I encode each realistically in 5 minutes including the cleaning up of dirts and etc., that is about 70 hours of work. Or if I want to get it done within a year, it is 11 minutes per day …

Hi Wilfird,

That netgear box actually had a vintage look! 🙂 With the decorations around it, the box looks pretty small… like a small Rediffusion box from the yesteryears!! 🙂 Cool!

Kltham – Depending on your usage I suppose. If you need 4 bays and raid, you can choose between Netgear and Western Digital. WD is about 25% cheaper. But I think Netgear comes with tons of software including Retrospect that I am testing right now. It backs up my local drive in an industrial manner. Very interesting stuff. And if you intend to stream flac format, I think Netgear is one to go for. My friend Mat is an avid photographer and he loves Netgear NAS.

Cisco does have the Media Hub too. But that is more for general entertainmet with 2 bays.

Squeezebox is an audiophile quality streaming device. ReadyNas is where you can rip all your songs into, and it has a SqueezeCentre software included in ReadyNas to “serve” the music to the Squeezeboxes. (http://www.slimdevices.com)

I’ve about 15,000+ songs and 1,000 over CDs ripped over some months into the ReadyNas. Never turned back. Make my search of particular music or CD so much easier! Its like Music-On-Demand. The initial “pain” of ripping is quite daunting. But only have to do it once.

There is a big difference with using Squeezebox then other stream players. It plays FLAC format. Its one of the best Loseless format out there and most use this to achieve CDs. (BTW, you can covert to any format from FLAC using MediaMonkey or other free publicly available software)

And the ReadyNas serves as an achieve for all my Raw files as well..

Lastly, this Nas is upgrade on demand as well. You can change all harddisk (one at a time for it to sync) to a larger one and when the last one is added, your NAS will upgrade to the new sized HDD you’ve changed, without re-copying all your files.

Wilfrid, enjoy your NV+!

Mathew – Hey dude, thanks again for coming by in such a short notice! Your sharing of experience is much, much appreciated!

I am OK to rip the CDs, maybe I am kind of obsessive compulsive. What I dread is the constant changing of codex and format. And of course, what I also dread is to clean up the CD because of the humidity in Singapore. But if FLAC is the way to go, flac it as it is then …

Wilfrid: I had issues as well on the format. Basically, the best format is one that has the best CD quality and best compression. (which is not possible!)

MP3 is most compatible, AAC (open format, not Apple formatted) has one of the best quality from low bitrate conversion. Hmmmm…. hard decision to make..

wilfrid: now you pressurizing me.. haha. I too hope I’m not wrong. What I do understand that most audiophile stream players like Soloos and Sonus also understand FLAC.
Given that FLAC can be decoded natively on these devices gave me the hint that this format has some weight as well.
What you can do is to test. Download MediaMonkey from http://www.mediamonkey.com/
Rip your CD and use a standard A/B test. Play your CD and play your ripped FLAC. FLAC has a few compression ratio standard. I almost always use 5 (mid point). Seriously, I could not really hear much of a diff.

Chuang Shyue Chou – Absolutely. Somehow the database for classical music is not that accurate. Also, what I find to do a lot is that iTune at times classify albums under “Compilation”. And it is a pain to tag it to artists and album titles.

Oh, another thing I re-do a lot is the artist names for the collaborated track titles. To be honest, I am only interested in the main artists.

wilfrid : sooloos, sonus and Squeezebox are a few audiophile streamers brand. From very ex, to affordable. Squeezebox been the most affordable and better quality.

Sooloos is very nice, touch screen..etc. Cost up to 20k SGD. 😀

Sonus is in between 1-2k depending on setup.

Squeezebox is from 400+ to 2k. Depending streamers.

Hopefully we did not further confuse u

Mathew – Ah, thanks for the info. 20k SGD high end models are more from affluent friends of ours like Kiat …

… for me, I just need something to play music with reasonable quality.

Ha ha ha …

I was there with a friend who wanted to buy a laptop!
I wanted to buy a new external HDD too but in the end I decided against a frivolous purchase 😛

Thanks Wilfrid Wong for this article. I was looking into a NAS for keeping some movies, photos and ‘digitalizing’ my CDs – your basic audio/ video stuff. I’ll definitely consider this NAS brand- Netgear – when the next IT show rolls around – sometime in end 2011? Any recommendation or updates or insights to your project – since your post was written in Mar 16, 2009 and it is now Sep 26, 2011? Thanks again for sharing!

Richard – Hi there. I am still using the Netgear NAS. It did break down once. But more like multiple hard disk failure that somehow was not reported for me to take preemptive measure. Through the Netgear support, I got that sorted.

If I am to buy a NAS today, I will take consideration of other top brands as well. Having said it, it is likely that I will stick with Netgear. Or even get another NAS to backup this old NAS of mine.

I know. Paranoid right? 🙂

Paranoid? Not at all, seems more of customer loyalty to the brand. When you feel comfortable with a brand, you tend to stick to it – at till it disappoints you!
Anyway, I’m still saving up to buy the hardware (NAS + HD) and was wondering how do you go about converting your CDs to the FLAC format – do you have a guide or website that you goto?
I am a family man and with time restrictions, I cannot go and ‘experiment’ on the settings, etc for FLAC conversion.
My project involves converting my Teresa Teng CDs (yes, i belong to the baby boomers category) before the CDs all grow ‘mouldy’ on me.
Thanks for replying to my mail and do keep your blog going – it makes for interesting reading and helps me know what trends the X or Y – generation are talking/ blogging/ facebooking! 😉

Leave a Reply to wilfrid Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.