Friday 20 September 2013

Seagate Business Storage 2-Bay NAS

Pros Easy setup and HDD installation. Sharp, user-friendly interface. Anywhere, anytime remote access for users. Good drive recovery. Affordable.

Cons Performance lags a bit behind some competing NASes. Poor online documentation. Bottom Line A good performer, the Seagate Business Storage 2-Bay NAS would be fine for the smaller end of the SMB. However, there are speedier two-bay NASes, and the Seagate lacks some of the extra features in other NASes in its class.

By Samara Lynn

The Business Storage 2-Bay NAS represents the lowest-tiered model in Seagate's business-centric lineup. The two-bay model is suited for the smallest end of the SMB, say, a small organization or solo –run business. With two bays, an organization is limited as far as fault-tolerance to only disk mirroring which may not suit those with more urgent data needs (Seagate does offer a 4-bay and 8-bay rackmount model). The device performed well in testing and has some good business capabilities such as support for adding SSL certificates and joining Windows domains. There are competing two-bay NASes with speedier Read/Write performance and this Seagate unit lacks some of the extra features in other NASes in its class. 

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Specs
Seagate Business Storage is a two-bay NAS that can support 4, 6, or 8TB of total storage on SATA drives. Internal components include a CNS3420 Dual Core 700MHz CPU and 512 MB DRAM.  The two-bay model ships diskless.

The front of the NAS has a tray door that opens to the two drives trays. Drive trays are easy to pop in out of the chassis, making HDD installation simple. There is also a USM—Universal Storage Model—slot on the front of the box, in which you can insert a Seagate Backup Plus portable drive. With this drive added, you can set up one-touch copy jobs to copy data from the NAS to the portable drive. This copy process allows for backup or lets you take data from the NAS with you—a good thing, because I found Seagate's provided remote access capabilities lacking. More on that later.

The one-touch copy button is on the front of the chassis as are three LEDs to indicate power, system health, and disk activity. There are two USB 3.0 ports for connecting external storage (one touch copying can also be setup for USB drives attached to the NAS).

The rear panel has dual Gigabit Ethernet ports. These ports can be aggregated within the NAS' interface to configure network connection load balancing or connection fail over.
The NAS can be configured with RAID 0, RAID 1, or JBOD (here's a basic primer on RAID). Windows XP and later are supported as is Mac OS X 10.5.8 and later, so you can incorporate this device to work with Time Machine. For those concerned with security, the NAS uses SSL/TLS-grade encryption.

Setup and Using the Business NAS
Setting up the Seagate Business NAS is simple. The device ships with a disc that includes the Seagate NAS Discovery app for locating your NAS once it's connected to your network, and the BlackArmor 2011 Backup Software. Either app is optional to install, but you are going to want to at least install the NAS Discovery app for initial setup.

Setup only entails installing the Discovery app, having it find the NAS on the network, and then clicking a Launch NAS Manager button within the Discovery app to get into the interface to configure the NAS. The hardest part of the setup is installing the drives and the sturdy drive bays make that an easy task.

The interface is sharp-looking and well-designed. It opens to a Home Page which includes a Getting Started wizard that walks you through initial housekeeping tasks such as adding users, creating folder shares, setting up backup, and more. An impressive and detailed Dashboard is accessible from the Home Page. It provides a plethora of at-a-glance information including drive health, system status, disk space, help information, and a list of getting started tasks. The only capability that would make the dashboard better would be if it was customizable—allowing you to add and remove the information you want from the menu of settings and views on the left-side of the screen.


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