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LaCie Ethernet Disk Mini - Home Edition Server

By Tom Spring , PC World , 02/22/2008
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Home servers are becoming more popular with families who want to store music, videos, and photos in a central location and share them inside and outside the home. I looked at LaCie's 500GB Ethernet Disk Mini - Home Edition server, and came away impressed enough to recommend it to anyone interested in taking the home-server plunge. It's not nearly as powerful as HP's $700 MediaSmart Home Server, but at $210 the LaCie hardware lets you enjoy the core benefits of a home server without busting your budget.

The LaCie server, which is about the size of a hardcover book, connects to your home network router via ethernet. You cannot connect to it over Wi-Fi or through a FireWire or USB port on your PC. Setting it up took about 40 minutes, mainly because I hit a snag when the installation software didn't automatically configure my Linksys router's UPnP settings. After following the instructions for setting it up manually, tweaking my router settings to allow remote access to my home server, it worked.

What's special about the LaCie home server is its software, made by Axentra. You install the included HipServ application on any computer--Windows or Mac-based--that you'd like to use to access the server. The program turns the server into an adept storage device that provides permissions-based remote access and media server functions such as streaming video.

HipServ has basic backup features, but don't expect a robust data backup offering. A software feature called DesktopMirror can back up and restore files, and also allows you to schedule backups of folders. You can't use it to back up an entire PC, however, and it doesn't have any system recovery features.

To access your content via the Web, you create a URL in the form of "yourhipservname.homelacie.com." In my tests, streaming audio and video both inside and outside my home network worked well. When used inside your home network, the LaCie unit supports iTunes, which allows you to create playlists. On the other hand, streaming audio files over the Web from your LaCie server is not ideal, because in that case iTunes is not supported. As a result, you can't create playlists, and the server will stream only one song at a time. If you want to listen to an entire 16-track Sheryl Crow album, for example, you have to initiate 15 separate downloads, one after another.

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Lacies dies just after warranty goes outBy Mathias on September 14, 2008, 2:24 amHi, just wanted to warn everyone against the lacie NAS disks because me and two other friends have had these lacie disks and just a couple of months after the warranty...

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