CES Under The Radar: Stuff You Missed : Storage: LG NAS

By Douglas Mechaber and Rachel Rosmarin, published on January 14, 2009 at 2:50 PM
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What do you do with that data generated by a small business, a work group, or even a home office, where you can’t afford tape backup, have no one to run multiple DVDs  (besides, those DVDs are hard to track and number)? Maybe you’ll want to consider LG’s clever NAS.  The N4B1 is the first NAS with a built-in Blu-ray rewriter.  There are four bays, supporting drives as large as 1.5 TB, and a Blu-ray rewriter capable of recording 50 GB per disk.  It even supports real time backup! Also on the unit are 3 USB 2.0 ports, a 1 Gbps network port, an eSATA port, and a memory card reader.  The N4B1 supports RAID 5 (default), 0, 1, 1 +0, and JBOD.  Hot swap is supported.  The best part, aside from the integrated Blu-ray backup, may be the price.  Without drives – it supports any SATA drives you install – the target is an amazing $899.   

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Comments
swankenstein 01/15/2009 2:48 AM
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I can't see your photo story because of the stupid pos visual studio pop up, thanks

wiyosaya 01/15/2009 7:11 PM
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Sony has one 11.1" OLED????

Sounds like you went to a different show than these guys....

zads 01/15/2009 7:22 PM
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CORRECTION: 800MB/s & 600MB/s,
not 800Mb/s & 600Mb/s..
the latter is entirely mediocre.

JohnMD1022 01/16/2009 2:27 AM
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No hard drives, backup-up drive will hold 50 Gb, on a device certified for 6,000 Gb, and $900?

Why do i think i could build it better and cheaper?

hmmmmmmmmmm ....

ediver 01/17/2009 5:28 AM
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Thanks for the correction, zads. Don't know how I missed that.

ediver 01/17/2009 5:34 AM
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A far as the LG NAS is concerned: there are a few features it has that didn't make it into print. Those include a catalog dredger, so that duplicates of files aren't backed up (not quite data dedupe), the ability to stream virtual media discs to multiple users, and the real time backup. Remember that in a typical RAID 5 or 1 configuration, the total storage will drop somewhat. Existing backup solutions are very expensive (LTO and AIT drives are outta sight) and per GB, the storage costs are similar to BluRay. Also, most backups will be differential or incremental, and in a small work group or small/home office, I would be impressed with someone generating over 50 GB of content per day. So, yes, I do find the price quite attractive, but it is at least 6 months from announced ship date, the price is approximate, and the market will almost certainly change between now and then.

Anonymous 02/13/2009 5:27 AM
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I'm sorry Pioneer but Yamaha has had:

# iPod compatibility via Yamaha Universal Dock
# USB port on front panel to connect a USB memory device or a USB portable audio player
# On-screen display with iPod song title display
# Compressed Music Enhancer to improve compressed music sources

for as long as the current series has been around, sometime in 2008.

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