Nas

My Take on Synology as a Sys-Admin

My Take on Synology as a Sys-Admin

I first dipped my toes into using Synology though their top-notch NVR system. I had eight cameras at the time around my house and it worked very well for myself and my family, though paying $40-$50 a license per camera can get expensive fast. I didn’t really use it for its other features for years until a fellow sysadmin introduced to me the functionality that it had offered him as he did large project like setup NVR and NASes for the city and school systems. It intrigued me enough to accept his proposal of bringing in a Synology 4U rackmount server into my main datacenter.

Data Hoarding in an RV - Updated

Data Hoarding in an RV - Updated

In my previous article of https://blog.lanlocked.xyz/data-hoarding-in-an-rv/, I documented how I was using a Synology DS1520+ as my NAS. After fighting with it and the main array of weird issues Synology desires to implement, which I won’t get into here, I have recently sold the setup and gone with a much more robust system, or systems, in my RV.

I have built three new server systems, but first lets start with what hardware I am currently running.

Data Hoarding in an RV

Data Hoarding in an RV

I like to data hoard but I don’t take it the extreme. I am able to prune things I really don’t need. Living in an RV doesn’t help with having excess. In fact part of the liberating thing of the RV life is to get rid of things that we don’t really need. right Believe me it was hard giving up on my networks, and servers, server racks, and full tower PCs, but going miniature and finding out what you really need is freeing. It’s not totally based on the fact that I don’t want things its also based on the fact that I don’t have room enough to put stuff in.