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ads nas drive kit manualOffering compatibility with many operating systems including most versions of Windows, Linux and Mac OS, this enclosure makes it easy to add a personal network server to any small network. Define Your Own Storage Needs You can place any standard IDE, sometimes also referred to as Parallel-ATA or ATAPI, hard drive up to 250GB in size into the enclosure, allowing you to add as little or as much storage as you need based on your specific needs. There is no need to purchase hard drive space that you do not need. System Compatibility The server is compatible with most version of Windows, Linux and Mac OS, allowing you to integrate the device with your network no matter what varieties of operating systems and computers that you own. Web-Based Configuration The web-based configuration tool allows any computer with a Web Browser to configure the settings on the server. The server features built-in password authentication so that only the administrator can alter settings. Security The server allows you to create user accounts with varying security. This lets you define what users can access data on a folder-level, allowing you to set folders as no access, read only or read and write. This gives you extreme flexibility in defining what users are allowed to access specific data, letting you use the drive for both public and private information. Multiple File Access Protocols The server supports access via the Samba, CIFS and FTP protocols. This ensures that many operating systems will be able to access the drive, and remote access is even possible with the FTP protocol. Built-In Web Server The integrated web server allows you to setup a web site on the server, allowing you to easily host an intranet portal or similar site on your small network. Built-In BitTorrent Client The integratede BitTorrent client allows you to easily use the popular peer-to-peer file sharing protocol without having to leave your computer on constantly to download large files.http://abc-tel.ru/data/diagram-of-manual-transfer-switch.xml
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You can even configure the client to only download files during certain hours of the day. Let us know YOUR RECENTLY VIEWED ITEMS Browsing History ON Clear History Not responsible for typographical or illustrative errors. Please email us if you're running the latest version of your browser and you still see this message. The actual Open Box product may differ in packaging and included accessories, but has been tested to ensure basic functionality. Suffered one complete data loss when it decided to have a fit. MUCH BETTER alternatives out there for the same price.Also sells for a fair price.Data transfer is very slow. The HTTP (webserver) can only host 1 website (what a shame). No way to update the entire embedded Linux OS to operate more efficiently and more stable.A method to update the entire embedded Linux OS.The manual was no help, had to look at linksys support page to find the answer, no idea how to use it from work. Would not recommend this one for the average user I need a geek for this problemSoftware is stable.Less than 1MB a minute.Samba seems stable, and the web server and bit torrent client are a nice feature.Very old version of Samba.This product is a good first step backup, until you can go in for a NAS which is RAID capable.So far, it's working better than I expected. I was a bit worried after reading all the users review about BT not starting etc. The only complaint is max of 2 BTs. To do it right, you need to open up the listen port in your router to allow BT to comm with the outside world. Many don't realize this, and the manual doesn't say it either.It's pretty darn fast booting up, too. Apparently it uses a version of microLinux. If you choose certain complex passwords, it will set the password for you, presumably in the fashion you requested, but authentication will never succeed. I ended up having to choose a simpler password. Lastly, it's terribly slow copying data to and (sometimes) from the NAS.http://www.phleb.ru/userfiles/diagram-builder-manual.xml I attribute this to the fact it's uLinux and the CPU running that os probably doesn't offer any more processing than a Motoroal 680x0 series CPU.However, to my surprise, it's not a standard disc layout. Once you store your data on the NAS, it's accessible only through the NAS.Had to dig through website to find out how to connect, found I had to connect directly and manually input ip to set up. Then all worked fine.Not a preferred method for noise and speed, but price was good and HD's cheap.Click here for more details. Secure shopping made faster. Check out with PayPal. Any exceptions to the condition of the item outside the manufacturer’s information should be provided in the listing, up to and including warranty details. Any accessories MAY OR MAY NOT be included. Newegg will NOT send you any missing accessories, even if it is required to use all of the item’s functions.Open Box items usually do not come with manufacturer or vendor warranty or technical support. However, warranty support may be available if an item was never registered by a previous owner. Please contact the manufacturer to check. Product may includes warranty, and accessories found with the original product. Product may or may not be in the original packaging. Returned items with minor packaging defects fall under this category. Product does not come with warranty unless stated otherwise in product description. Product does not come with warranty unless stated otherwise in product description. Product does not come with warranty unless stated otherwise in product description. Functionality issues beyond signs of use should be disclosed in product description. Some manufacturers place restrictions on how details of their products may be communicated. Some manufacturers place restrictions on how details of their products may be communicated. Some manufacturers place restrictions on how details of their products may be communicated.http://schlammatlas.de/en/node/22460 Some manufacturers place restrictions on how details of their products may be communicated. Discover everything Scribd has to offer, including books and audiobooks from major publishers. Start Free Trial Cancel anytime. Report this Document Download Now Save Save NAS Drive User Manual For Later 0 ratings 0 found this document useful (0 votes) 105 views 59 pages NAS Drive User Manual Uploaded by Cristian Scarlat Description: User Manual for NAS drive Full description Save Save NAS Drive User Manual For Later 0 0 found this document useful, Mark this document as useful 0 0 found this document not useful, Mark this document as not useful Embed Share Print Download Now Jump to Page You are on page 1 of 59 Search inside document Browse Books Site Directory Site Language: English Change Language English Change Language. We delete comments that violate our policy, which we encourage you to read. Discussion threads can be closed at any time at our discretion. To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzes reviews to verify trustworthiness. See All Buying Options Add to Wish List Disabling it will result in some disabled or missing features. You can still see all customer reviews for the product. Could not be simpler to set up and use. Only reason for not giving this 5 stars is it should be a gigabit device. Please try again later. From the United StatesPlease try again later. Please try again later. Amazon Customer 4.0 out of 5 stars Could not be simpler to set up and use. Only reason for not giving this 5 stars is it should be a gigabit device.Please try again later. Please try again later. Alfredo Rubio 1.0 out of 5 stars Really is a shame because the interface is really nice but doesn't work. I think I lost my money buying this.Please try again later. Please try again later. John D.http://www.maisonvallomy.com/images/color-manual-r.pdf Shepard 5.0 out of 5 stars This is the 3rd one I've bought and mated with a 500 GB Seagate HDD with 16 MB cache. Woiks poifectly!Please try again later. Please try again later.This thing configured OK and worked for a while, despite it sounding like it was built with worn-out fan. You have to unplug it to reboot it. Your mileage will vary. Oh, and if you actually hit this thing from multiple machines at once - forget it. I think it has a itty bitty 1-bit, 1Hz processor that can't shovel data faster than you can type.You should also know that it does NOT run FAT32 or NTFS - it appears to us some version of embedded linux - so forget about transplanting the drive if the controller goes walkabout. I'm dealing with trying to move 400Gigs of data off my failed ADS box right now.but can't keep it running for any decent length of time. And did I mention it's buggy. Stay away from this thing. Oh, and a friend of mine owns two.and has had all these problems, plus data corruption. Run away from this. Fast.Please try again later. Please try again later. Brian A. Egge 1.0 out of 5 stars First off, I knew that it only had a 10 Mbit Ethernet connection. It doesn't seem that long ago that I had a 10Mbit LAN at home, and I don't remember it being all that slow. (I've since remembered that I wasn't transferring very large files on that LAN). Had I not been an idiot, I would have done the math and figured out how slow the router is really going to be. The CPU and the hard drive do not seem to be the major bottleneck, but rather the Ethernet port. True, if it had a 100 Mbit port, the CPU would probably be the bottleneck. However, there are some efficient hardware components which can seriously reduce the load on the CPU, so I think the 170 MHz processor might be able to handle a faster network connection. Considering a 10 Mbit connection, the most data which can be transfered in one direction is about 1.2 MBytes per second. With smaller files, you won't get the maximum transfer speed. Lets say on average, you get 1 MBytes per second. Unless he'd calculating the speed which the drive can format itself, there is no way you can get more than 10 mbs over the Ethernet connection. This device isn't going to work at all if your editing movies, and need the extra storage. However, I'm a patient guy, so I could see using this as a sort of online backup. It's cheaper than any Internet site, and the speed is faster than if it went over the Internet (at least for me). So, if even if I can live with the slow speed and the fan noise, I can't live with the instability. The device frequently locks up for no apparent reason. I can hold the power button down all day and it won't reset. I have to unplug the unit and then let it reboot. After it reboots, it doesn't automatically sync the time. It can't even guess what the time it. It goes back to thinking it's 1999. The P2P function seems novel, but I wouldn't touch it seeing how flaky and under powered the rest of the system is.Please try again later. Please try again later. F. Lamaestra 2.0 out of 5 stars I'll bet that next year you'll be able to get a NAS with you happy meal at Mikky Dee's. The ONLY reason I got this NAS was because it has an embedded P2P Bit Torrent Client. How cool would it be to remotely queue up torrents using the web interface at work and come home to watch some cool IPTV. No more cable providers, no more commercials, life is good. The emotions were lost as time went by, and nothing HAPPENED. The torrents page on the ADS NAS kept coming up (60 second auto-refresh) with NO PROGRESS for several HOURS. I added a few more torrents, 5 total and checked the listen ports and other BT settings to make sure my settings weren't screwed up. After some time, a few of the torrents actually Dl'ed something, but only about 6 MBs in 6-hours. The torrents which should have kicked right in never started at all. This performance really sucked. Strangely enough write speeds are on par with my other NAS units (about 3700 kbs). It's amazing what performance features I am willing to give up, just to use the remote BT feature. This happens when I delete or copy a large amount of small or large files to the NAS. Sounds like a bug. Customer Support message from ADS. I have confirmed the listen port, and all the config details, this thing should be coming down faster and beginning quicker. My bit torrent client on my PC will start the same torrent in less than 5 seconds. What the heck is going on? Fabian. REPLY: hi fabian your results are consistent with some of ours.Please try again later. Please try again later. Matrixunloaded 1.0 out of 5 stars The installation disk bombed out on the first computer because of an active-x problem. I did get the software installed on a second machine. But there is no way to add a user (that button is grayed out). But the worst part is the NON-EXISTENT customer support. Even their sales offices are closed. My advice -- stay away from this product and anything else ADS Tech is peddling.Please try again later. Please try again later. IowaRob 1.0 out of 5 stars You better do what you need FAST, the thing will loose the hard drive faster then you can walk into the other room after a reboot. If bill gates finds out about this he might want to stick a Microsoft sticker on the linux build that this Nas Drive runs. Lets hope they get a new firmware out FAST!!! Version 1.03 is better then the new 1.04 version. Dont upgrade to 1.04!!Please try again later. Please try again later. Stone Phlips 2.0 out of 5 stars The main reason I bought this Kit is for the Web and FTP server function, but neither of these features worked probably. I installed a Seagate hardware into the Kit without sweat, pluged it into the home network,and it did get IP adderss from my Linksys router DHCP server (10 mins). Got into Drive Kit management console, very happy, Format the hard drive. Went to Desktop Network Neighbor map the drive the to both WEB and Share directory, tried to copy a file into it. I scanned the network, and it seems that Drive Kit responsed the TCP 21 for FTP. Used browser to access the FTP Share directory, and could not browse the directory and time out the session, tried to using DOS, ftp command to access, login successfully will default password, but hang on listing directory -Dir command. Tried forth back, no luck. (1 hour) Before testing other advertised features, I dicided to give up. As a networks engineer for years, I could image how non-computer savvy consummers could handle this.Please try again later. Please try again later. It is a subset of the Debian universal operating system and includes free software only. You can run it on a small, inexpensive and power-efficient computer box in your home that is dedicated for that use. It can also be installed on any computer running Debian or in a virtual machine. In order to replace third-party communication services that are data mining your entire life, you will be able to host services yourself and use them at home or over the Internet through a browser or specialized apps. These services include chat and voice calls, webmail, file sharing and calendar, address book and news feed synchronization. For example, to start using a private chat service, activate the service from the administration interface and add your friends as authorized users of the service. They will be able to connect to the service hosted on your FreedomBox, using XMPP chat clients such as Conversations on Android, Pidgin on Windows and Linux, or Messages on Mac OS, for encrypted communications. FreedomBox is a product you can just buy, set up and use. Once installed the interface is easy to use, similar to a smart phone. User documentation: List of applications offered by FreedomBox. Manual Live Help from the community FreedomBox can also host a Wi-Fi access point, ad blocking proxy and a virtual private network (VPN). More advanced users can replace their router with a FreedomBox. Setting up FreedomBox on a specific hardware or on your computer running Debian may require a bit of technical expertise or help from the community. Related technical documentation: Machines that support FreedomBox Download and Install FreedomBox Developer Manual This includes secure instant messaging and low-bandwidth, high-quality voice conference calling. FreedomBox lets you publish your content in a blog and wiki to collaborate with the rest of the world. On the roadmap are a personal email server and federated social networking, to provide privacy-respecting alternatives to Gmail and Facebook. This allows FreedomBox to become a media library for your photos, music, and videos. The folders are shared to laptops and mobile phones on the local network, and the media can be streamed to local devices including smart TVs. It can sit between various devices at home such as mobiles, laptops and TVs and the Internet, replacing a home wireless router. By routing traffic, FreedomBox can remove tracking advertisements and malicious web bugs before they ever reach your devices. FreedomBox provides a VPN server that you can use while you are away from home to keep your traffic secret on untrusted public wireless networks and to securely access various devices at home. It can also be carried along with your laptop and set up to offer its services on public networks at work, school or office. In the future, FreedomBox intends to deliver support for alternative ways of connecting to the Internet such as Mesh networking. However, at the core, it is a server software that can aid a non-technical user to setup services and maintain them with ease. Security is automatically managed and many of the technical choices in system administration are taken care by the software automatically thereby reducing complexity for a non-technical user. This nature of FreedomBox makes it well-suited for hosting services for small communities like villages or small firms. Communities can host their own services using FreedomBox with minimal effort. They can setup Wi-Fi networks that span the entire area of the community and draw Internet connections from long distances. Community members can enjoy previously unavailable Internet connectivity, ubiquitous Wi-Fi coverage, free VOIP services, offline education and entertainment content, etc. This will also boost privacy for individuals in the community, reduce dependence on centralized services provided by large companies and make them resistant to censorship. The free e-book FreedomBox for Communities describes the motivation and provides detailed instructions to setup FreedomBox for this use case. Members of the FreedomBox project are involved in setting up Wi-Fi networks with free Internet connectivity in rural India. This e-book documents their knowledge and experiences. First demonstration of FreedomBox at SFLC, University of Columbia by Sunil Mohan Adapa. Alternatively you may choose to build it yourself, by gathering all the components: A supported device (including any device that can run Debian). We will call that the FreedomBox in the rest of this manual. A power cable for your device. An ethernet cable. A microSD card (or equivalent storage media for your device), prepared according to the instructions on the Download page. Power on the FreedomBox. Note: On most single board computers, don't expect any output on a monitor connected via HDMI as the support may not exist in the kernel. See below to access and control your FreedomBox via network. On first boot, FreedomBox will perform its initial setup (older versions of FreedomBox reboot after this step). This process may take several minutes on some machines. After giving it about 10 minutes, proceed to the next step. Note: Currently, due a known bug, you need to restart your FreedomBox after 10m and then proceed to the next step. Is this still the case. After the FreedomBox has finished its initial setup, you can access its web interface through your web browser. If your computer is connected directly to the FreedomBox through a second (LAN) ethernet port, you can browse to: or. If none of these methods are available, then you will need to figure out the IP address of your FreedomBox.After installation this certificate can be changed to a normal one using the Let's Encrypt option. The first time you access the FreedomBox web interface, you will see a welcome page. If you have installed FreedomBox using a Debian package, you will be asked for a secret key. This secret was generated during the installation of the Debian package. The next page asks you to provide a user name and password. For additional security, you may want to use a separate account for administrative tasks and for your normal, daily use. You can add more users later. After completing the form, you will be logged in to FreedomBox's web interface and able to access apps and configuration through the interface. Now you can try any of the Apps that are available on FreedomBox. You can also access it by clicking the FreedomBox logo in the top-left corner of the FreedomBox's web interface. The front page includes shortcuts to apps that have been installed and are enabled. For web apps, clicking the shortcut will take you directly to the app's web page. For other services, clicking the shortcut will show more information about the service. This page lists all of the apps that are available for installing on FreedomBox. Click the name of an app to visit its page, where you can install and configure it. It includes helpful links and the FreedomBox manual. It includes a number of pages related to system configuration. A drop-down menu includes options for editing the current user or logging out of the user interface. When the display or browser window is very narrow, menu options may be hidden. That is because the top menu options are collapsed into the burger icon shown at the top right corner of the window. Click on it to display a drop-down menu. Feel free to join and ask anything you like. If you receive help, please consider to report your solution to the Questions and Answers page, so others can benefit in the future. You can browse solutions to known problems or request help from community contributors by asking a question. This is also the best way to provide community contributors with feedback about your FreedomBox experience. To post new content, you will need to register for an account with name and email address (but you can provide pseudonym and non-primary email address). By watching topics and categories or by enabling 'mailing list mode' in your account preferences, you can interact with the forum by just sending and receiving emails similar to a mailing list. Potentially it takes some time before some member is answering you, be patient, a reaction will come later. If you do not yet have a client installed, you can use your web browser to join. For more options, see this matrix client overview page. In order to ask a question and get an answer from the community, please register from the mailing list page providing your email adress and creating a password. You can also read discussions archives. This list gathers about 700 readers. It could help others to use FreedomBox in a way they would have not imagined. Note: If you purchased a FreedomBox kit, this section is not meant for you, so you can just skip it entirely. (Unless you specifically want to build an alternative software image). You may either install FreedomBox on one of the supported inexpensive hardware devices, on any Debian operating system, or deploy it on a virtual machine. Installing on a machine running a Debian system is easy because FreedomBox is available as a package. We do recommend to install FreedomBox on a supported single board computer (SBC). The board will be dedicated for FreedomBox use from home, this will prevent a lot of risks, such as accidental misconfiguration by the user. In case of trouble deciding which hardware is best for you or during the installation, please use the support page or read the Questions and Answers page based on posts on the Freedombox-discuss mailing list archives. Instead, read the instructions on setting up FreedomBox on Debian. On the web, there is a lot of documentation about setting your device up and flashing USB or SD Cards to boot your hardware. Note: Testing and nightly images are automatically signed by the FreedomBox CI server.You'll need to copy the image to the memory card or USB stick as follows: Figure out which device your card actually is. Unplug your card. Run dmesg -w to show and follow the kernel messages. Very carefully note this and use it in the copying step below. Your downloaded file name will be different. Copy the image to your card. Also make sure that you don't run this step as root to avoid potentially overriding data on your hard drive due to a mistake in identifying the device or errors while typing the command. USB disks and SD cards inserted into the system should typically be write accessible to normal users. If you don't have permission to write to your SD card as a user, you may need to run this command as root. In this case triple check everything before you run the command. Another safety precaution is to unplug all external disks except the SD card before running the command. On MacOS (OSX) you can use programs like balenaetcher and rosaimagewriter. The above command is an example for the cubietruck stable image. Your image file name will be different. The device without a number refers to the entire device, while the device with a number refers to a specific partition. We want to use the whole device. Downloaded images contain complete information about how many partitions there should be, their sizes and types. You don't have to format your SD card or create partitions. All the data on the SD card will be wiped off during the write process. Use the image by inserting the SD card or USB disk into the target device and booting from it. Your device should also be prepared (see the Hardware section). Read (the rest of) the Manual for instructions on how to use applications in FreedomBox. These instructions are similar to obtaining and building source code for Debian since FreedomBox is a pure blend of Debian. Using this process you can obtain the source code to the exact version of the package you are currently using in FreedomBox. To see the list of software packages installed on your FreedomBox, run the following in a terminal: dpkg -l To obtain the source code for any of those programs, then run: apt source This requires that the apt sources list contains information about the source code repositories. These are present by default on all FreedomBox images. If you have installed FreedomBox using a package from Debian, you need to ensure that source repositories are added in the file.Source code and pre-built binary package for any version of a package including historic versions can be obtained from snapshot.debian.org. For example, see the plinth package. You can also obtain the links to upstream project homepage, upstream version control, Debian's version control, changelog, etc.You can build and install a package from its Debian's version control repository. For example, git clone This is also available as a Debian package and source code for it may be obtained using the above methods. Build instructions for creating disk images are available as part of the source code for freedom-maker package. FreedomBox disk images are built and uploaded to official servers using automated Continuous Integration infrastructure. This infrastructure is available as source code too and provides accurate information on how FreedomBox images are built. It contains a small but important fix that is not part of Debian sources. The fork of the Debian u-boot source repository along with the minor change done by the FreedomBox is available as a separate repository. We expect this change to be available in upstream u-boot eventually and this repository will not be needed. This package can be built on a Debian armhf machine as follows (cross compiling is also possible, simply follow instructions for cross compiling Debian packages): apt install git git-buildpackageText and code snippets can also be pasted and shared. Text, image, audio, video and PDF documents can be previewed in the browser. Shared files can be set to expire after a time period. Depending on which password is used to login to bepasty, the user will have different permissions. They can have any combination of the following permissions: read: Read a file, if they know the URL.After bepasty is installed, it comes pre-configured for the following roles: Viewer: can view and list files Editor: can view, list, create, and delete files Administrator: has all permissions These roles support a use-case of file sharing between known, authorized users. If needed, you can re-configure bepasty to support other roles and use-cases. This means that you will need to distribute the passwords to the appropriate users, through any communication channels that you have. Note that you may want to create multiple passwords with the same permissions. This allows you to distribute a unique password to each user (or to a group of users). Then if you want to revoke access to one user, you can simply delete their password.