How to Set Up a Synology NAS with the new DS1019+

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hey everybody its Lawnside banan we're going to be doing a two-parter on the channel for a product that just came in the other day this is the new Synology des 109 plus this is a network attached storage device with five drive bays on it and what I thought I would do in this video is set it up and show you what all the steps are to get everything working because you do have some choices to make when you're configuring one of these things and then in the next video we'll review the unit itself and talk about why you might want to go with the more expensive mid-range model like this one versus some of their lower-cost entry-level devices so we've got plenty to do on this one and we're going to unbox it and get it set up in just a second but I do want to let you know in the interest of full disclosure if this is on loan from Synology so we're done with this it goes back to them all the opinions you're about to hear are my own nobody is paying for this review nor has anyone reviewed or approve what you're about to see before it was uploaded I should also mention that we do occasionally have sponsored videos from Synology on the channel as well this video however is not sponsored so let's get into it now let's unbox it and get it going alright so let's get this thing out of the box here I don't have a price on this one yet I think it's going to be under $800 disc lists so you do have to get your own drives to go along with the rest of the device here this is the power cord by the way but one of the things you can do with one of these multi bass analogy drives is start off small and kind of work your way up here's the quick installation guide so if you don't want to purchase five drives right away you can buy two of them and then add more as you need to do that there are some decisions you can make to make that expansion simple and we'll explore some of those options in a minute so we've got a bunch of cardboard in here let's move all those things out of the way and here is the unit itself now this is powered by an Intel processor I think it's a Celeron and it's very similar to some of the mini pcs that we've looked at the chip on this particular model is going to support the Intel Quick Sync feature so it should work very well for working as a Plex server in addition to a number of other things as well so we'll explore all of that so let's get it out of the box here now this particular model comes with eight gigs of RAM which will give us a lot of different things we can try when we go to do our full review and I'm eager to play with some of those more advanced features than what my current device can accept and then that's it we've got it out of the box here and now we have to start installing some hard drives it's very easy to install drives on this you just pop out these little trays here now the first decision you have to make is what drives do you get with it now what Synology sent over to me were a bunch of these Toshiba drives these drives are designed specifically for network-attached storage and all of the major drive manufacturers have some kind of Nass and the reason why you might want to go with an ass drive which costs a little bit more versus a more traditional hard drive is that these are designed to run 24/7 they often come with better warranties so if your data is very important to you then I suggest spending a little bit extra on the nicer drive to make sure your data is going to be intact all the time these drives do last longer I've had very good experiences with Nash drives over the years in fact I got a bunch of them in one of my other devices that have been running now for four years and they're still fine I may do a drive replacement strategy on that soon and that might be a fun video to talk about as well now these things are designed to accept the drives without any tools so what I'm gonna do here is just pop off these two rails and we're going to place the drive in oops like this and make sure the screw holes here kind of a line and looks like we're good to go there and all you have to do is just snap back in these little plastic things here and that will secure the drive in its tray again you just want to make sure it's lined up with the screws on the side of the drive here and then what we're going to do is repeat this process times five and to spare you the agony of watching this what I'm gonna do is get all these drives out of the boxes and install then I'll show you what we do next alright so we got our last drive ready to go here we're just going to slide it into the bay here and close the door so now we've got five four terabyte hard drives installed but we are not yet done because this device has another feature called SS caching there are some numbers here printed above each of these slots we have one and two and this will accept nvme solid-state drives that look like this it will not work I believe with m2 SATA Drive so you're going to want to look for it MDOT to nvm II PCI Express Drive now I'm only going to put in one of these and this will impact the decision we'll be making a little bit later when we get things configured now what the solid-state drives do on one of these Nass poxes is that they act as a cache for frequently accessed files this is not going to improve media watching or encoding or anything like that but if you are storing a lot of spreadsheets or Word documents or maybe you've got a bunch of photos that are frequently accessed what the Nass is going to do is continually monitor usage and the files that it sees you're accessing the most over the network it's going to copy them over to the cache so that they're more quickly available for requests because one thing when you've got five spinning hard drives here is that it doesn't always find the data you're looking for very quickly so having one of these solid-state drives in place is a way to speed that up a bit and there's a couple of different ways you can use this now in keeping with their tooless installation here we just have to snap back this little piece of plastic to put it in place and now we are all set there so we're going to put that back together all right so our storage is installed on here and remember you don't have to use all five bays to start if you want to start on the cheap get two drives and then upgrade down the road but if you do put all five in you do have a lot more options for how you want to configure the storage now the next step now that all the storage is ready to go is to get the network connected now this particular model has two one gigabit ethernet jacks on the back there's a bunch of different ways you can make use of the available network resources you have with this some of the other higher-end Synology boxes support the ten gigabit standard which allows for faster speed provided the computers you're connecting with also have ten gigabit adapters I do think for most small all offices and home environments you probably just need that single Gigabit Ethernet connection here and all you have to do is just plug your Ethernet in and you're off and running they don't have Wi-Fi typically built into these boxes I don't recommend Wi-Fi for a network attached storage just given the amount of resources it takes to operate but you can install a Wi-Fi adapter with USB here on one of the USB ports if you really have to use Wi-Fi and you have no other solution so what I'm going to do now is get this thing plugged in and then we'll begin stepping through the software configuration so the NASS is now powered up when you first turn it on you're going to see the power light here blink for a bit it will then beep and go solid and it might be hard to see on camera right now but the status light here is blinking which indicates that we are not yet installed although we are booted up and the best way to find your Synology nass on the network when you first plug it in is to go on your web browser and go to find dots analogy comm and what you should see when you go to this website is your particular nass device here waiting to be set up so here we've got our ds1 o one nine plus we have the local IP address and then we also see that it is not installed one thing you might want to do after you get everything set up is set a static IP for your local network address for the Synology nass so you can more easily find it but as you'll see a lot of modern pcs and other devices will just find it automatically no matter what its local IP address is we're going to click connect now and that's going to bring us to all of our ulis stuff here which will agree to to get going and one of the nice things I like about the Synology interface is that it's got a really nice web interface that's very easy to understand even though you're got a lot of open source software running underneath it isn't always the easiest to figure out so the first step here is to install the disk manager software which we're going to do right now we're going to click install and what it's going to also remind us about here is that the data on our five hard drives is going to be removed so if you have taken drives out of another device and put them in here they will of course get erased now there are some ways you can migrate from one Synology device to another I did a video about that a couple of years ago so if you do have a set of drives from another Synology nass and it supports that migration you'll see something different here but any other kind of Drive is just going to get wiped out which is what's going to happen right now and this process will take a little bit probably about 10 minutes it says it's going to be downloading that software formatting the drives and getting everything set up for our next step so we're going to let this run and when it's done we'll come back and do more configuration so now everything has been downloaded and installed and now we are being asked our first configuration question which is what do we want the server to be called and I'm going to call this DES 101 9 just so I know which one it is on my network I'm going to set up a username and a password here and then we'll move on from there now it's telling me my password is weak so you might want to experiment with a couple different password options to get a stronger password especially if you want to make the drive here accessible on the Internet and you can go through and play around with a few different password options there are ways to enable two-factor authentication on this as well which you might want to do we did a video on two-factor authentication that you might want to check out and then we'll move to the next option here so now it's asking us about our dsm update and maintenance now this is going to be the first of many choices we have to make here now you can always change your mind later what I recommend for most people is you have it install the latest version automatically and then you can set an installation schedule we're just going to go with Sundays and Wednesdays right here it's saying 6:05 a.m. but if you are you know busy work environment you might want to set it for like 3:00 a.m. or something just so that it doesn't interrupt your work day or your weekend playtime or whatever and you will see updates getting installed quite frequently on these and it's important to make sure those happen because this is largely powered by open-source software and when there are vulnerabilities discovered they have been very good about patching those pretty quickly so if you don't want to worry about that stuff and just have it maintained for you click that option and just let it go the other cool thing is that it doesn't seem like they stopped doing these because my Synology device that I use in my closet over there has been going for about four and a half years and it's still getting updates all the time so it's really nice to just have that happen for you if you are a more advanced user you can of course manage this yourself but I think for most folks having it do it automatically is the way to go we're gonna leave the other options intact here now here's our next decision which is Quick Connect so what this lets you do is set up a Synology account and Synology is not going to get your data but what they're going to do is give you an address that you can use to access your Synology Drive when you're on the internet someplace other than home it's very convenient but there are some security considerations here because if somebody were to get your username and password and figure out what your Synology Quick Connect ID is they could of course access your private data my preference is to set up a VPN which I did through my router that I use so that I have to have a certificate a username and a password and then I can get into my network and access the drive it's a little bit more work to get in but it is something that's a little bit better to work with but if you are looking for just a very quick and easy way to forward your domain over you can create one of these Quick Connect IDs to do that if you don't want to do this hidden down here below the next option is skip this step to move forward and this is what I would suggest you do but again if you want convenience you can create a Quick Connect ID and then when you load up one of your Synology apps you can just type in that Quick Connect ID to quickly get to your device over the Internet okay next it says we are all set and it's asking us to take a quick guided tour of DSM there's also an option here to share your device's network location to make it easier for you to find it via fine dots analogy comm I'm going to leave that checked off because I like to have more control over these things but if you do want to very quickly find your drive that's another way to be able to do that and now we're going to move forward here the next question is device analytics if you wants to provide some anonymized analytics to Synology you can click guess here or you can say no thanks and that will be it so now what it's going to do is just kind of guide us through the basic interface of our Synology DiskStation here so you can see where to find your applications and the package Center which I'm going to step through for you here in a second and now it looks like we are in and ready to go so our system health here is good and we are ready to start configuring things and that will lead us to our biggest decision here which is how to configure the five drives that we have installed on this device and we're going to step through that configuration now what you want to do is go up here to the upper left hand corner push that it's kind of like a little Start menu and then you want to go over to storage manager and when we pull that up you'll see here that we have five unused disks that we need to assign to something so we're going to go over here to volume and you'll see there is no volume in your system so we're going to create that volume right now now you have two options here one is quick and one is custom a quick will create an SH our volume which is Synology hybrid raid and they recommend this for folks who are just looking to get started quickly it's not very hard to configure this is probably the best way to go in my opinion if you only are starting out with two or three drives on here because what you can do later is just add more drives and it's a fairly simple process to begin expanding your storage there are other options you can pursue that will let you do similar things but SHR really is the easiest for getting started but you may not have all the control you might want if you're an advanced user so I'm going to click on the custom option here first just to see what some of our options are and what they mean but eventually we're going to go back and set up a quick option here for our volume now the first thing it's going to ask us is whether or not we want to create a storage pool because we have no storage pool created the only option is to create a new one and then it's going to ask us if we want better performance or higher flexibility basically it's asking us if we want to create multiple pools on here that are managed on different drives or just have the entire set here be made into a single volume I think it's better to go with that single option as the better performance option here will let us do just because it's simpler so we're going to do that now by default it is asking us to create a raid 5 array it's kind of the compromise position between performance and redundancy and storage space but the problem with raid 5 is that it only supports one drive failing before you have an issue so if one of these drives failed and then we lost another one our array is pretty much done for so there are some options you can employ here to be able to get more than one drive redundancy and that would be going to something called raid 6 which is an option here on the list then you have to have a minimum of four drives to start with raid 6 but this would allow you to be able to lose two drives yet still have your data intact now the problem though is that when you go to something like raid 6 you don't have as much storage available to you so I'm going to run through some things here onson ologies raid calculator to make this a little bit more visual it's what we have here are 4 5 4 terabyte drives like our device here has currently and then we can select what kind of raid types we want to go with so you can see SHR and raid 5 are very similar in that we would have 16 terabytes of available space but essentially one of those drives or the space on one of those drives is reserved for redundancy so that if we lost the drive we can still maintain our array if we select raid 6 here you'll notice that we have 12 terabytes available to use but 8 terabytes are used for protection again that's if we lose two drives here we still have the ability to maintain the array with raid 6 so this decision you're making here is very much whether or not you need redundancy or the maximum amount of storage before you get started and that is an important decision because it will impact how this thing is going to work moving forward what's important to note here is that there's an option called SH r2 which is essentially raid 6 that would give you the same breakdown in storage here but I do believe if I'm not mistaken that Sh r2 might be a little bit easier to expand the storage array later versus regular raid 6 it gets really complicated based on how you have things configured and what size drives you put in but in the interest of simplicity here and thinking potentially about the future I'm gonna go with SH r2 for this and hopefully you were able to figure out what you might need from this brief explanation of what your options would be for an array like this one and we'll go back over to our configuration screen select quick and create an SH r2 array and you'll see that the minimum number of disks we need here is 4 if we went with regular SHR we could actually start with one and then build it out as we go but again my preference here for this simulation is having redundancy that would allow for two Drive failures so I'm going to click on next here and you can see now it's selected all five disks I could choose to only put it on four if I wanted to and maybe use the fifth as a spare or something but I want as much storage as I can get out of this so I'm going to click on next now and now it's going to remind me that the drives will be erased and I'm ok with that so I'm going to click continue and now you've got another decision you have to file systems you can choose from one is btrfs which is what's analogy recommends and the other one is the Linux ext4 standard filesystem now one of the neat things about btrfs is that it offers a few things for data redundancy in addition to the physical redundancy here we have with these drives I did a video on btrfs which I'll put down below in the video description so you can check it out and see exactly what it does but there are some things like snapshotting and other features that might help you recover a file that was changed even if you don't have a backup made it's a really neat way to go about things some people don't like btrfs for a host of different reasons so if you are not comfortable with it you can go to ext4 but i think again for our simple installation here btrfs should work well for most small office environments so we're going to click Next here and get started and we're going to be given a confirmation screen about all the different things that we just set up here and we should have about 11 terabytes or so of storage available once everything is configured there's a little bit of overhead it looks like for the Sonali system itself which is why we don't have the full 12 that we saw a little bit earlier alright so I think we're ready to get started now I'm going to click apply here to build out the raid array and it will take just a few minutes to get ready to go on to our next step and what you'll see here on the device is all the drives here blinking because they are getting configured our status light is now a solid green so we know that we've made some progress here and if you look on screen what you'll get is a confirmation of what you asked for which is the Synology hybrid rate in this instance with data protection of two disk fault tolerance and again if you chose something different you would see something different on that particular screen we have the btrfs file system and you can see right now it's verifying hard disks in the background for parody consistency this takes a really long time when you first set up one of these things so just be prepared to not get the full performance out of this initially you might feel a little sluggishness both on the network and just in doing things with it once it gets through with that parity check it'll feel a lot better so just be advised if you see things running a little bit slowly don't worry it's just because it's doing this fault tolerance check and that's going to take it a little while to get going all right so now that we've got this raid array going that consistency check is happening in the background we can now build out our file shares finally and make this device available to users of our network so now let's go over to the control panel if for some reason you don't see it right here you can click here and then find it on your list of applications and we'll just load that up real quick and we're going to go over to the shared folder option and we're going to click create and I'm going to call this LAN just to be simple here and we'll say that this is Long's stuff keep out and we've got this on Volume one if we had multiple volumes on our array we could choose which set of hard drives it will be stored on you have the option to hide it from Windows computers if you want but we want to make this thing available to our network users so I'm going to click on next here you have the option to encrypt the shared folder if you want and you can set that up here I did a video on this I believe a little while ago so I'll link to that but again we're keeping things simple for this video just to get things set up and operating and we can maybe go into some of these more advanced features a little later if you're interested so we're going to click on next here there's an option to enable data checksum for advanced data integrity and what we can do here is enable that and that will enable some of the features of the btrfs file system to ensure that we're not getting any file corruption just an added piece of mind here you can get for that you can also through btrfs have a shared folder quota so if you want to limit how much stuff people can put into one of these things you can enable that here as you're setting it up you also have the option to compress files if you want to try to make them a little smaller for saving space but because we've got well over 10 terabytes at the moment I'm ok just leaving all that stuff off we'll click on next to move forward and now we can see we've got our confirmation here I'm going to click apply and that's going to now create our first shared directory here on the server now the next option is to look at users and who has access to what they have a lot of options for setting up users on here and determining what those users can do and you'll get this screen every time you create a new volume so you get them set up from the get-go but what I'm gonna do here is kind of leave things as is because I'm going to create a user in a minute and show you how you can restrict people from getting into things so we're just going to click OK for now and now this volume is created we can actually get into our Synology disk station now and start putting files on it if we want so let's go over to my Mac real quick you can see that the DES 101 9 is showing up on the network so it is working and accessible to our computers right now it's not connected here on my Mac because we have this thing of course by usernames and passwords so on the Mac I'm going to click on connect as you just saw there I'm going to click connect again I'm going to type in my username and the password I set up and when I do that sure enough there is the LAN folder and I've got a couple of random images I think I'm going to just stick in there just to see how everything works so let's do that real quick we'll just drag those files over and now those have copied over the network and what I want to do now is just jump back to the Synology interface because one of the cool things you can do is actually use your web browser to browse around the device here and as you can see those images that I just sent up are now accessible to us on the web interface and then anyone else who had access to this file share here could also look at them and they even have a nice little image browser that works inside of this web interface you can look at some of the files on there and again I'm going to refer you back to some of the prior videos I've done on the Synology series because there are some really cool features that you can get at both for file searching and accessing files was even a text editor available to you so you have a lot of things you can do right here within the web interface but this is basically how it works we've got our file system set up we can access it over the network and we have restricted it at the moment just to me and the administrator user on here so let's create another set of users and give them their own place to be in and away from my stuff alright so let's jump back to the control panel now we've got two options up here for users we've got users and groups and what I'm going to do actually is create a group for my kids called kids so that we can more easily configure things moving forward now I can assign this group to a specific folder if I don't want the group to access my stuff I can click on know access here but you also have the ability to give people read-only access to a particular folder so if you just want to create files that people can look at you can restrict their ability to edit or change those files by clicking on read-only but again I don't want them in my stuff I'm gonna click Next here we're going to create a separate share for them in a minute now some of these things are things that we're not going to worry about either including the user quota setting on that particular folder we don't need to here because we're giving them access to that we're also going to not at the moment give them access to applications but I'm going to show you how you can install applications in a minute and you can actually restrict what applications people can get access to when they log into the sonali ji DiskStation over a web browser like we're doing now so you have a lot of fine-tuning controls you can have here by groups you can also limit how fast they can access certain features of the Synology discs nation here like the FTP and file station you can actually slow down how fast their uploads go in if you want and we're going to click on apply here just to create this group and now what we'll do is we'll go over to users and create a couple of users that we can put in here so we're gonna create one for my daughter Kyra and we'll just give her a fake email address here and we'll give her a password of dad rules right which is a very weak password that you shouldn't use but it gives you an idea as to how this creation process goes I'm gonna leave everything here as the default I'm going to click Next here and I'm going to assign her to the kids group now and then you'll see very similar things to what we saw before because you can actually override the group permission here if I wanted her to have read-only access to my folder even though she's in the kids group we could do that here if we wanted to but we're going to skip through all that again we have application settings that could go beyond the group permissions I will click Next here next again and apply and now that user is being created and now we'll create one for the other kid and then when we're done with this we will set up a file share for them so that they can get access to some files alright so we are now back on the control panel screen we're going to go to shared folder we've got the volume I created for me I'm going to create now another shared folder for them and we'll call this kids folder and we'll just say for the kids only and we'll go ahead and just complete the process we did a little bit earlier we'll put that checksum on there why not and I could even go back to this quota thing and say you know what I want to limit the kids to 3 gigabytes and no more and that will limit the actual share folder size here and I'll click apply and that will create the folder and now be available now on the network now the next step here is to assign access to this now I have two kids and for the sake of efficiency I can select groups here and say that kids can have read and write access to the folder you can also see that the administrators have read and write access so I can get in there we'll click OK here and that will get things going so now what we should be able to do is head over to this little Windows tablet that may be my daughter Kyra is using and let's see what she can get access to ok so let's go and pull up the Windows Explorer icon here now what you want to look for is the network option here on the lower left-hand portion of the screen and you can see the DES 101 nine is showing up there one thing on Windows that confuses people often is that you'll you might see the device in more than one place so for example under other devices here we're seeing it show up but if you click on this you're not going to get access to the file system so you want to look for what Windows calls computer and you can see here we have the DES 101 9 there so I'm going to click on this and what will happen more than likely hopefully is that we will be asked to enter in a username and a password so I'm going to type in Kyra and our password of dad rules and I'll click OK and now what'll happen here is we'll be able to see the files that Kyra has access to so let's give this tablet a second here to catch up and get authenticated and then once that process is done we should see what files we can get at here so let's let this thing do whatever it's doing and we'll come right back ok so now we can see that we have the kids folder which she should have access to and it's also showing the long folder that she doesn't have access to so if I try to click on lawn here you can see now it's asking for more credentials because access is denied so we can't get into that but we can get into the kids folder here and just like before we can drag some files in and copy them over to the Synology disk station if we wish and that file just went in there and then what I could do maybe is go back on my Mac here which is logged into the sonali's web-based control panel and if I go into here I can see that the picture that Kira just copied over his in here so you can see how you can limit access to things how I can have access to something that my kids are using but they can't access things that I want and again you can spend a lot of time in here getting everything configured out the way that you want and that's one of the nice things about the complexity sometimes that these systems offer is that you have the ability really to finally tune who can do what and when and and how so it's a really robust system now we've got one more thing to configure on here which is the SSD cache now remember we put in that nvme Drive on the bottom of the unit when we were setting it up now it is time to configure it now that we have some files on our new file system here and we're going to go to the Start menu and we're going to go back to the storage manager and what we're going to see here on the storage manager is an option for SSD cache and I'm installing some software on here too so we might see this disappear for a second so bear with me what we're gonna do is go over to create and when we do that we're going to be given an option for what mode we want now you'll see right now that readwrite cache is disabled and the reason is that we only installed a single SSD on here in order to have read write caching work you need two for redundancy it almost sets up a mini raid between those two drives because if you are doing the readwrite cache and you've got data on the SSD and it fails you can have some data loss as a result so the safest option is to do the read-only cache which will improve consumption of files on the network like photos and documents and whatnot but you don't have any risks to data by doing the readwrite again though if we had two SSDs in there and you're doing a lot of reading and writing to those small files this might definitely improve performance but for this example because we have a single SSD installed we're going to do the read only option it found the drive that we have installed on the bottom there the force MP 300 I'm going to click Next here and we're going to dis allocate all the size that it needs and click apply it's also going to remind us it's going to basically erase the SS so that's fine and we'll let that process and once that's done we have our cash set up and what will happen here it's going to mount it and then as we start using this analogy Nass will actually be able to get some analytics as to how many files are on there and what kind of efficiencies we're gaining by caching some of that stuff to the SSDs you can go in there and look at it every once in a while to see what happens they also have a cache advisor here that will take a look at your current file usage and make some recommendations as to what kind of cache you might need if you are adding this later you don't have to do it right away like we're doing now so what it'll do is it'll take a look at what's being accessed on your device here and after it does a short analysis it'll make some recommendations as to how big your SSD cache needs to be in order to be functional let it process here and I'll show you what it looks like when it finishes up that ok so the analysis is complete and you can see it's giving us a recommendation of a cache of at least 458 megabytes to access all the hot files that it has access so far and this is kind of a little bit inaccurate at the moment because we just set up this device so we're really not sure exactly which files are going to be read more than others but this gives you an idea as to how it works and of course over time the files that fall into the warm hot or cold categories will adjust based on how users are accessing the files on the device now we're not going to spend too much time in package center but this is something where you'll probably spend many hours playing around with all the different applications that they give you access to there are many many many applications and servers that you can install the one I suggest you start with though is the hyper backup system which you can find right here I did a whole video on this in fact I think I did two videos on hyper backup it is very robust it gives you the option to backup to USB hard drives you can do local network backup so you can then also send your backups off to cloud services that's something that I do to here in the studio just to keep my youtube videos backed up safely somewhere off-site and I think it's really important to spend time getting your backup set up before you really do too much more with this because although you've got that redundancy on here should an asteroid hit your house you're kind of out of luck so you really want to make sure you've got the files on here copied and sent somewhere even if it means using an external hard drive that you shuttle back and forth to an outside location because you can't stop physical damage from happening to your home or office and it's important to just keep those things in mind you could even have somebody walk off with this thing they have Kensington lock options to prevent that but again it's something that is vulnerable and you've got a lot of data now in one little spot that I think you want to make sure you protect there is a ton of other stuff that we're going to talk about in the next video the focus of the next video will be some of the things that you can do with a more high end device like this one or at least a mid-range device and that includes things like Sun ologies office suite that allows you to edit documents and spreadsheets and everything including multiple users accessing those same documents simultaneously through a web browser just like you can do with a major service but it's all contained in the Box that you own and control in your office there of course are no charges for the 10 terabytes of storage we'll have access to on here because we own it and it's really cool to have that ability to do that and it's really pretty simple to get everything up and running so we're going to be stopping this video now because we've got this thing set up and running and what we'll do in the next one again is look at some of the unique features that you'll get when you spend a little bit more for your Synology Nass until next time this is lion Simon thanks for watching this channel is brought to you by the lon TV supporters including gold level supporters Chris Allegretto the four guys with quarters podcast Tom Albrecht a new Zaveri in cali an Kumar if you want to help the channel you can by contributing as little as a dollar a month head over to LAN TV slash support to learn more and don't forget to subscribe visit lon TV /s
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Channel: Lon.TV
Views: 218,193
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: Synology, NAS, set up, how to, configure, setup, SSD cache, RAID setup, RAID, install, installation, Lon Seidman, Lon Reviews Tech, Lon.TV
Id: 01jZIpv5IUo
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 38min 14sec (2294 seconds)
Published: Wed Feb 20 2019
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