Overview: With the dollar to terabyte ratio decreasing every day, there’s no excuse for not having adequate digital storage space. The new Iomega ix2-200 Network-Attached Storage (NAS) unit makes adding storage to your home or business network about as easy as it can get. Its a very powerful, versatile unit that is quite nearly plug-and-play. Let’s take a closer look shall we?
The Hardware: First off, this thing feels like it could survive being run over by a tank. And if tanks can’t destroy your data, what do you have to fear? Inside the metal enclosure is a 1.0 GHz Marvel processor, 256MB of RAM, and two SATA II platters. The disks are set up in a RAID 1 mirror, although you can disable the RAID and run it as JBOD instead. All of this is controlled by a Linux OS, EMC LifeLine. You also have three USB 2.0 ports, one in front, two in the back. Gigabit Ethernet jack, power input, and one of those nifty security lock ports if you have problems with people walking off with your hard drives.
Getting Connected: The setup for this thing was a breeze. Plug in power, plug into router, run install disc and you’re ready to start storing data like its going out of style. Instead of having to install some sort of UI software, you’ll be greeted with the above page in your web browser. From this control interface you can have full administrator access from any machine on your network. You can see the list of various settings below. I’ll go through and hit the big stuff.
Backup and Restore: The ix2 makes backing up your drives almost a fully autonomous procedure. Using what Iomega calls “Copy Jobs”, you can set the source and destination of the files, put the job on a reoccurring schedule, even tell it to only import new and modified files. You can set up multiple Copy Jobs for different drives or for different locations. Want to backup another external drive every week? Not a problem. Do you want pictures to be saved in one folder, and important documents in another? Just a few clicks away. The ix2 also has full Time Machine and Retrospect support to back up your computer.
One of the cooler features of the ix2 is the QuikTransfer button. You can assign one Job to the QuikTransfer button located on the front of the device. Now you can activate that Job, even if you’re computer isn’t up and running. Its really useful for downloading any new files you need very quickly. Just pop a flash drive directly into the unit, press the button, and a few thousand revolutions later, you’re up to date.
Disks: Here you can change the RAID configuration of the unit. Default is the mirror-protection mode. Essentially writing your data twice, so that in the event of one disk failing, all your data is on the other disk. The downside is that you have half as much space to work with. The Disks menu also has the option to securely erase your data, making it unrecoverable. You know, for sensitive material.
Email Notification: Pretty self-explanatory, but useful. Should any problems arise, the ix2 will send an email to you detailing the problem.
Event Log: Another straightforward feature. This log keeps track of which users accessed which files, when they did so, any errors that occurred, etc. It all downloads as a text file for your convenience! Useful for making sure your employees aren’t using your network to seed the latest season of Dollhouse.
External Storage: You can attach up to three external storage devices, and ix2 will make them available on the network.
iSCSI: More for business users, the ix2 has iSCSI, iSNS, and Mutual CHAP capability. If you don’t know what those mean, don’t worry about it. You won’t be needing it.
Media Service: Here’s another place where the ix2 shows some pretty cool innovation. First, this device is a UPnP and DLNA certified media server, allowing for streaming music, videos, etc. all over your network. But you can also wire in up to 5 security cameras into the ix2 and turn it into a surveillance station. The video streams can be remotely viewed, or recorded.
Network Service: More technical jargon to throw at you. The ix2 supports multiple file sharing protocols including, AFP, Bluetooth, NFS, rsync, SNMP, and CIFS. Whew!
Power Management: Designed to suck as little power as possible, the ix2 only activates the fan when the internal temperature gets to a certain point. This not only reduces the amount of power used, it keeps the drive from sounding like a freaking jet engine on your desk.
Printers: Just like with external storage devices, you can plug in a standard, wired printer, and the ix2 magically makes it wireless! No way! Or at least available to the network. Plugged in my HP Photosmart, worked like a charm.
Remote Access: If you’re out on the road, but still need to access important files you left back home you’re options are usually limited. The ix2 has a unique URL that allows you to access it from any internet capable computer. I like this option better than having my files “in the cloud”, hosted by some 3rd party.
Security: This one is another very useful tool. When you assign others on your network a user ID and password, you can also set the level of access the have on the drive. You can set read or write privileges for each individual folder on the drive, giving you a lot of flexibility in your security options. Keeping your video tech out of the financial records and the like.
Torrent Download: Quite possilby my favorite feature of the ix2. It comes with its own torrent client built in. Meaning you can set torrents to either leech or seed, and you don’t need to leave your computer on to do so. The ix2 will automatically download or upload the data independently. Brilliant!
Concluson: Well, we made it to the end. As you can see, the ix2 has a lot to offer personal and small business consumers. If you haven’t started using external or network based storage yet, I highly recommend you start. The ix2-200 comes in 1 TB, 2TB, and 4TB flavors, at $269.99, $369.99, and $699.99 respectively. Plus, external drives are easier to ditch when the RIAA comes pounding down your door looking for all of your pirated legally obtained, and properly licensed media.














I think you meant “dollar to terabyte ration”, not the other way around…
No. No one is rationing terabytes. Well, maybe if your network admin is really stingy…
But yes, I did put it backwards.
So for $269 i get 1TB JBOD or 500GB RAID1, correct?
Indeed.
I have been looking at this NAS and one from the Buffalo line. Can you tell me if the torrent client will all rss feed or just the ability to manually add torrents?
I own an Iomega StorCenter ix2 and it does not support rss feed torrent downloads. This would be immensely useful for me, as most of my torrent downloads are done Miro using rss feeds.
And I don’t think they have exposed any apis that will allow a person to implement this on their own.
How noisy is it? does it uses twonky media server or something like that? i.e. does it supports transcoding? how’s bittorent download speeds?
The harddisks of the 2Tb version are very noisy. I had to put it in the basement…
Hans
I’m a bit of a novice at setting this up but I think I know what I want. In an automated fashion, can this machine make a full backup each week, daily incremental backups (or full backups each day) and delete the full backups and incrementals once they have aged three weeks?
Have you looked at their online manual? Or their specs? Or their warranty?
I think that this is misadvertised. I can buy a 2 TB for $250 today. But NOWHERE can I find out if this is two 1 TB drives in the box or two 2 TB drives. Not in the documentation. Not on the IOMEGA website. Not in the ad from the retailer.
And, the warranty is void unless an IOMEGA sata hard drive is installed.
And worldwide access will require each user to adjust their port forwarding on their router. For many DSL customers, the modem also acts as a router, and no access is granted. This could be a problem.
The specs pages should show the number of drives (I think it is always 2) and the capacity of each. One of your previous writers identified this issue but only briefly. JBOD offers complete storage capacity but no real security.
Finally, I think that all hardware creators of RAID 1 should have a utility that allows checking of the integrity and match of both drives. Plus switching which drive is the master (since reads are directed to only one drive, but writes are directed to both, which exercises the master to a much greater degree than the backup). I worry, with my RAID 1s, that I am creating a backup that might not be able to be read or be a perfect copy.
it actually does come with an utility to test the redundancy. Check your facts ;P
Does anyone know how to instal a HP LaserJet 1020. It seems to be connected but no prints come out.
overall i am really happy with this…couple of gripes:
1. Noisy, really noisy
2. Printer sharing is really flaky, slow and buggy (sharing a HP Photosmart via USB)
3. Network copy to shared external USB is notoriously slow.