Home NAS adventures, part 1

There’s a little Dell Optiplex SX280 next to my main desktop monitors, currently unplugged but with two external USB drives on it. It’s running Windows Home Server, but it’s usually off. I haven’t had the motivation to fix the issues with it, mostly from having a small primary drive and a shortage of table space. On top of that, we’re expecting that Microsoft will remove the Drive Extender feature from WHS in the new release, so I want something a bit more easily usable into the future.

So I’ve been pondering, for about six months, a home NAS to replace it, and maybe expand on it. So many options, from roll-your-own to hosting off my overpowered desktop to a purpose-built commercial appliance. I’ve promised a couple of BayLISA attendees such ponderings in blog form, so I’m finally getting around to it.

First requirement: Figure out the requirements

If all you need is external backups that are removable, a USB drive is probably good enough. If you want to back your VMware servers and feed your TiVo or smart TV, you need more. If you need 100k IOPS and n+2 redundancy, you need a different article.

Also, think about your budget. Sure, those pictures of your grandparents getting creative with Bob Marley are irreplaceable, but for the sake of moderation, think about what you can afford for the first generation of your home NAS. You can re-do it later when a new round of technology comes out, so don’t think of it as a permanent thing.

A model railroad buff I took some clinics with in the 90s referred to “givens & druthers.” You had your givens (this much space for your layout, this much money, your eyes able to see this small of a scale) which were not necessarily a unilateral choice, and your druthers (model the entire Florida East Coast Railroad with enough yard space to hold your 500 handpainted cabooses), and you’d decide how they best fit together and compromise accordingly.

So for my givens, I’ve decided that about $500 (plus disks) is my budget. I need gigabit Ethernet connectivity, independence from any particular PC I currently use, Windows/Mac/Linux connectivity on some level (CIFS is okay for this project), and a 5TB usable minimum. I am not stuck on hot-swappable disks, so they are not a requirement. I have two new-in-box 2TB 5900rpm “green” disks, and an unused 3TB USB3 external drive, that I’m willing to donate to the project if warranted. And these green disks (with 5yr warranty) are well under $100 so I can add more.

My druthers would be iTunes streaming, TiVo integration (although I have a Premiere XL and can expand it locally), bittorrent client, automatic backups (a feature I loved with the Windows Home Server), hot-swappable and auto-growable disks, and future expandability in number of disks, not just size of disks. I’d also like iSCSI and/or NFS for VMware backing stores.

Second step: Consider the top-level options

We have two options for this project, if we assume that hanging a pile of external disks on our PC is not an option.

* Build a PC with a lot of disks, to serve as a NAS appliance

* Buy a prebuilt custom NAS appliance

If you choose option 1, you get a lot more flexibility, lower up-front cost, and more expandability, but you have to consider the time factor, and software upgrades, and “support” if you’re so inclined.

If you choose option 2, you probably pay more up front, but you put less time into building/testing, you have someone to go to when something breaks or needs updating, and there are probably smoother interfaces to some of the features you want. Many prebuilt custom NAS appliances allow automatic hands-off disk expansion (other than plugging in the disks physically), so this is an appealing factor to some.

Prebuilt Custom NASes

We’ll start with this one, as it’s a bit more limited in scope.

When I started looking at a home NAS, the Infrant ReadyNAS NV was the top dog. This was probably 2007ish. I actually got a Thecus box for free on Craigslist, but I found the expansion to be painful (the system became unavailable for an entire day to upgrade from 4×160 to 4×320 hard drives) so I sold it and went back to USB drives for a while.

In the mean time, Synology and Drobo have both come out with a couple of generations of gear, Infrant was purchased by Netgear and has grown its product line as well, and there are a lot of smaller products like the BlackArmor line and some single-drive network-attach options from Seagate and WD.

Let’s look at current products that meet the requirements above.

Drobo has the Drobo FS, which offers five drive bays, single Gigabit Ethernet, Drobo PC Backup, Time Machine support for Mac, automatic rebuilding and capacity growing as new drives become available. List price is $699, but it can be had for a fair bit less from various authorized resellers, and rebates are often available as well. As of this writing, Amazon has it for about $560 and Drobo offers a $100 MIR bringing you under $500.

Synology has the DS411 product range, with the DS411 itself probably most closely matching the FS and the wish lists above. We have four drive bays, single Gigabit Ethernet with USB 2.0 and eSata ports for expansion, a number of A/V options including iTunes, DLNA, and BitTorrent, and a range of access protocols including iSCSI and NFS. List price on the Synology America store is $440, and discounts are available.

Netgear has the ReadyNAS Ultra and Ultra Plus lines, with a more powerful processor in the Plus at a slight premium. The Ultra 4 (RNDU4000)  is a suitable match, with four drive bays, dual Gigabit Ethernet, 3 USB ports for expansion and backup, three Memeo licenses for backup, iSCSI, DLNA/TiVo support, and a list price of $699. Discounts bring it to right around $500.

If you’re on a really tight budget, the ReadyNAS NV+ is still available. It’s a 4-drive unit with single Gigabit Ethernet, three USB ports, but a significant limitation that the others do not have. As the ReadyNAS NV+ is the older SPARC-based product line, it is getting firmware updates (as recently as last month) but drive support is limited to 2TB max per disk, and what I’ve read suggests this will probably not change. However, with a list price of $350 and much lower prices available at some retailers, it may be a good first step for some. If the limitation of 5.5TB or so is acceptable, you should consider this option.

But wait, there’s more…

In the next installment I’ll be looking at the options for a roll-your-own NAS, doing it myself with some parts around the house (to make sure I’m suggesting hardware and software that work together).

I’ll also be reporting back on the ReadyNAS NV+, which I learned this morning has third-party iSCSI support, and which I picked up this afternoon for $250 at Fry’s.

I do still expect to get a more modern device before Thanksgiving, but now I can ponder and save up a bit more, and maybe move up to a 6-8 drive device.

I welcome your thoughts on the above, suggestions regarding any of the products or anything I’ve forgotten (Iomega maybe?), etc. And feel free to use my links liberally to help fund my future home gear.

My new phone… and the adventure of accessorizing

As the release of the latest famous Cupertino phone approaches, I thought I would share some thoughts about my latest phone and the adventure of accessorizing it. If anyone’s concerned, I bought these on my own, with the Disney corporate discounts, but paid out of my pocket.

Just before a weekend trip to Walt Disney World, I upgraded from the HTC ThunderBolt 4G to the Motorola DROID BIONIC, the first dual-core LTE phone to come out.  Not long before, I’d added an inductive charging pad and wireless charging back to the Thunderbolt, and I also had the extended battery and desktop dock and car mount for it. I have a bad habit of getting all the accessories I might need, and then one or two, so I’m prepared for any solvable situation. And it means that when I pass the phone down to my significant other, she’s more than prepared for anything she’ll run into.

So I got the extended battery (half price on Verizon promo) and screen protectors for the BIONIC, since the car mount, wireless charging door, and webtop adapter were not in stock at my Verizon store yet. My rep at the Santa Clara store ordered the Verizon-branded car mount and the wireless charging door for me, and I ordered the webtop adapter later that day from home. My weekend in Lake Buena Vista had me with two batteries and their backs, and that’s it.

Verizon coverage is pretty good all around Disney World, for voice, text, and data. Sure, there are weak spots, but my connectivity was useful nearly everywhere I went. Even so, I saw about 4 hours of life on the standard battery and 8 hours of life on the extended battery, with 4G and GPS turned on, WiFi off, Wireless Hotspot service only while plugged into the charger. I broke a personal record (and an all-my-friends record) on Foursquare with my checkin activity (7-day max of 574), so I was making some use of the device. Usual sitting-in-pocket activity levels would have resulted in longer life, but I knew what I was doing.

The best accessory I could get, other than the extended battery (which seems less imposing than the Thunderbolt extended battery), is the Juice Defender app. It manages the data network based on your activity and settings, turning off the data service (3G/4G/1X) when idle and using less power. This ended up giving me about 1.71x battery life, and in fact the last day in Florida I had the standard battery in and was surprised to get almost 7 hours on it in the intermittent coverage of rural southern Florida.

I got the car mount, and soon discovered that there are two different car mounts available: Verizon-cobranded and Motorola branded.

Verizon sells their branded version with the Motorola and Verizon names on the front. Motorola’s direct version doesn’t mention Verizon as I recall, and it’s a different packaging design. They both come with the plastic disk for attaching the window-mount to a dashboard location, an innovative and long overdue mount design that lets you leave your extended battery or wireless charging door on while inserting it in the car mount (Thunderbolt car mount barely worked with the wireless door and didn’t even try with the extended battery), a micro-USB jack on the back for the charging cable, and an audio cable to connect the phone to the aux input on your car stereo.

The difference is twofold: First, the Motorola Vehicle Navigation Dock comes with a dual-USB car lighter charging adapter. Second, the Motorola version includes the custom cable that routes audio out the USB connector to your car stereo aux input. With the Verizon version, there’s no charging adapter, and you have to hook your audio jack to the phone’s headphone jack directly.

I read on various blogs that you could hound Motorola and they would likely send you the custom cable, or Verizon might do that, but I decided to send back the Verizon one (barely within the return period) and get the Motorola one. Amazon has it for about $54 (see previous link) and Fry’s had it in stock for $60. I got the wireless sales guy at Fry’s to go up the ladder and find one for me, so I could make sure it was right before sending the other one back. It worked, so the other one went back.

As with all of the DROID phones I’ve used (OG DROID, DROID X, DROID 2, HTC Thunderbolt, and now DROID BIONIC), the car mount has a magnet that sets off the vehicle dock mode on the phone (when the phone is seated properly). This gives you large, easy-to-find buttons for some basic functions like navigation, voice search, and user-specified actions (I have Gas Buddy and Foursquare added to mine). There’s an insert that makes the standard and inductive charging doors work, and if you remove the insert, the extended battery fits nicely. There’s a little clip on the top that holds the phone in place.

The wireless charging door works fine, although the Energizer Qi charger I got didn’t handle the Thunderbolt and the BIONIC at the same time. The Qi may be faulty, as I got it used at a thrift store, but it seems okay with one phone. The other inductive charger is on my desk at work, and works fine as well. Wireless/inductive charging is very convenient, especially if your phone is going to sit on an open space on your desk anyway. And between this and the car dock, you have no excuse for an uncharged phone on a regular basis.

The Webtop Adapter plugs into the Micro-HDMI and Micro-USB connectors on the phone, and sets off the “Webtop Experience.” You can mirror your display to an HDMI display, i.e. a television or computer monitor, or you can set the external display as primary, and the phone becomes a touchpad keyboard/mouse. You can also connect a Bluetooth keyboard/mouse to it in lieu of the touchpad mode, and have a netbook-type experience with your phone (including a full version of Firefox browser).

Without the Webtop Adapter you can still use HDMI display; I haven’t done this much but I think you need the Webtop Adapter (or HD Dock) to get the laptoppy experience. You can also drop $300 on the Lapdock to get laptoppy experience, and believe me, that’s tempting. If you’ve seen the Atrix at Fry’s you get the general idea.

I haven’t had much use for the Webtop yet, but I have the cable at work so I can use it there if I need to.

So that’s what I’ve come up with so far on this device. I’m loving it, and I enjoyed hearing the 4S announcement and seeing that my friends with iPhones are almost catching up to my last phone. Something to be said for 20mbps+ connectivity consistently on a phone.

So what accessories do you need for a new phone? How do you feel about the laptoppy modes that some laptops offer? And are you really going out dressed like that?

Aside: Amazon is allowing California affiliates again, as a result of a one year reprieve on an earlier California bill that would have put some new constraints on businesses with referrers in California. Geno Prussakov of AM Navigator has a good article covering the details of this process, and some good links out to other resources. Take a look if you’re curious. I’ll be putting some Amazon links in some upcoming posts, trying to bolster my toy budget, and the AStore link on the right is valid again.

Some brief caffeinated thoughts

Many of you know that I’m a coffee enthusiast. I’ve been drinking coffee since I was 3, and by choice since I was 6. There are currently four electric single-serving coffeemakers in my kitchen, along with an assortment of Aeropress, Toddy, Clever, Melitta, and random french presses. I have a Hambeach 12-cup carafe-less coffeemaker in the corner but I usually don’t need that much at a time anymore.

I’ve been looking for some good options for my Tassimo coffeemaker. Seattle’s Best has gone missing from my local retailers, and (not that I cared for them) Starbucks is leaving has left the Tassimo world. I’ve recently picked up two Carte Noir packs from Tassimo via Amazon, and wanted to give some quick thoughts.

First of all, why Tassimo? I also have a Keurig sitting next to it, and a Cuisinart SS-1 Cup-o-matic for pod and ground coffee. But there are two major benefits to Tassimo for me. First is that Tassimo will make espresso and regular coffee. The machine configures itself from a barcode on the T-disc, rather than from a menu on the machine. Second is that it will also make cocoa and milk drinks (latte, cappucino, hot cocoa). You can blend your own drinks, and I’ll often make a drink with a cocoa disc, a milk creamer disc, and an espresso disc. It’s a bit pricey for a strong mocha, but I can say I pay more than the $1.30 that this blend costs, for a handmade mocha at my favorite shop.

On to the actual drinks:

Both Carte Noir varieties are imports from Europe (very popular varieties in France at least) in foil packs of two 8-tdisc packs each. Amazon sells them in boxes of three packs, so you get 48 t-discs for about $20 with the Subscribe and Save option (which you can cancel after a single purchase if you don’t like it). (The links below are affiliate links, and if you buy through them, I do get a few cents in a couple of months.)

The first one, Carte Noir Kenya, is a single origin serving that I found to have a bitter/acidic taste with a bit of fruit to it. We’re not talking bad bitter here, although I prefer the more balanced flavors of a strong but unburnt blend.

I was reminded of a variety at Red Rock that described itself as having “peach” tones (not peach flavor), and if you think about a warm tangy fruit flavor (which is easier if you’re breathing it in at the time), you’ll have a sense of this variety. I sweetened it lightly (for me) with a splash of half and half, but I think it might go better with just the half and half. The sugar seems to brighten the acidity but leaves it there, and there’s a bit of an aftertaste to it.

The second one, Carte Noir Voluptuoso, is a darker balanced flavor. It’s on the darker side of a Major Dickason Blend, but tastes a bit more bitter than that or the Peets house blend. It holds up well with turbinado/raw sugar, and drinks smoother black than the Kenya. However, having just sipped the Voluptuoso black, and then sweetened without milk, I would lean toward lightly sweetened over black.

I believe the brew for these cups is around 3-4 ounces. By comparison, the Gevalia Signature Crema T-discs are closer to 6 ounces, and some of the light “breakfast blend” T-discs brew 12 or more ounces. I don’t recommend the larger brews, although if you like a very light roast, they will give you a full cup faster.

As I hinted at above, I did not really care for the Starbucks T-discs, but I’m not a big fan of most of their beans fresh out of the grinder (Brazil Ipanema Bourbon is one I actually like, and the Pike Place Roast isn’t too bad in a pinch).

I may write up a bit of my Keurig K-cup adventures in the near future. I’ve been a bit more successful in finding an all-purpose choice for Keurig, in the Timothy’s Rainforest Espresso Blend (which also makes a good daily driver in the pod world), but there are some good afterthoughts in my K-cup spinner. And some DIY capsules as well. So stay tuned. And I’ll write some more technical material later this coming week.

 

Update:

The day after writing this post, I had the idea to brew one Kenya and one Voluptuoso together. This combination pretty much got rid of the aftertaste of the Kenya, and also gave a larger, more American size cup. It ends up being an 80 cent cuppa, roughly 7 ounces brewed, with a pleasing blend of complexities. You might want to warm your cup (run the yellow “service disc once and then pour out the hot water) so you don’t lose the heat, but I cool mine off with half-and-half anyway so I don’t mind.

GoDaddy announces new PKoIP protocol, innovates tying panties in knots over the Internet

Okay, I didn’t think I would have breaking news for this blog, but what do you know…

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 01 April 2011 Pacific Time

On the heels of the armchair-elephant-expert viral video released at the end of March by GoDaddy CEO Bob Parsons, and the network congestion caused by discussion of the end of Internet Protocol Version 4 (IPv4),  GoDaddy’s technology team has announced that they will be open-sourcing their implementation of a new standards-track protocol for remotely tying panties in knots over networks including the public Internet.

According to GoDaddy Tech Team PR representative Ellie Fantt, this protocol, Panty Knotting over Internet Protocol or PKoIP, has been proven in real-world tests to be able to cause underwear to be knotted at distances of thousands of miles. “We are very pleased as a company to build on our expertise in televising attractive women in tight shirts, with this new technology for remotely manipulating lingerie using a subcarrier channel over existing video and text communication methods.”

“We definitely benefited from the availability of our GoDaddy Girls,” Fantt added, “many of whom are located in disparate geographical locations and most of whom wear panties. This simplified early testing, both of our implementation of PKoIP and of our new GoDaddy Girl lingerie line. We really feel that we are innovating softwear manipulation technology in the industry.”

David 3Com, founder of 3Com Networks, spoke highly of the protocol’s network independence. “We were concerned when early versions of the protocol spec came out, as they counted on passing through equipment of a certain color that we were not able to license for our equipment.” 3Com was appearing at a press conference with John Pancho, CPO of Cisco, who added that there was an active interest across many competing vendors in making sure that the protocol would tie panties of any color, whether Cisco’s studly industrial green or 3Com’s quaint baby blue.

Janice Trunkly, an Internet expert on elephant population control and African agriculture since March 2011, was one of the first experts to go on record as supporting the new protocol. “As an expert in elephants and new Internet protocols for some time now, I can say conclusively and authoritatively that this protocol is not funny. I just got my new supercomputer at Wal-Mart and found out elephants were dying, and this is an obscene way for some rich guy to promote a new protocol, even if it does work, and even if I had never seen an elephant before last week.” Six of her Facebook friends, five of them experts on elephant population and new protocols since April 2011, agreed completely with her assessment. One friend, Jim Ratt, added, “and why are they picking on that Charlie Sheen fellow? If I had porn stars living with me, I’d do live tv shows too!”  Shortly after the comment, Mr Ratt was removed from Ms Trunkly’s friends list, but retained his expert title.

Independent testing labs are currently testing the protocol’s effectiveness on various styles of undergarments. The initial proof of concept was done with thong panties, and thousands of incidents of anecdotal successes across a wide range of styles were reported in the late March public alpha test, but a more thorough, statistically significant test including men’s undergarments and so-called “commando” styles will be required before the IETF will initiate standards consideration.

The initial implementation is not perfect, however. “With various protocol translaters and proxies,” Fantt said, “it has even been shown to work with near perfect efficiency over cellular data networks and on smartphones. However, the current implementation is not able to function consistently on AT&T’s iPhone. Some users of that device may find that the protocol does not correctly register. As are many other developers, we are actively working with Verizon to fix this. “

Subliminal neglect

It seems like every three or four days I think of something new to write about on this wonderfully neglected blog of mine. Some of them may end up seeing a recitation or interpretive dance at LISA ’11, one of them is resulting in a bit over $1500/year more in my pocket (at least temporarily), and they’re all more interesting than this post.

So I’m going to ask my dear readers to prod me along now and then, when you’re in touch with me. Ask me why I haven’t challenged Stephen Foskett to a Packrat-off. Tell me what you’re doing for a home lab so I can brag about and compare your ideas. Remind me that I’m supposed to be putting a little bit more time into this. And don’t expect any contact with me on Easter eve evening, for obvious reasons.

Thanks everyone, and stay tuned.