*IMPORTANT* - Since the time this comparison was filmed, Asustor have changed their hardware/software support of M.2 NVMe SSDs and now allow them to be used for BOTH storage and/or SSD Caching. This means that both systems have equal support of this feature, not just QNAP (as indicated in the recording).
This is very true and my comments in this video, although correct at the time of recording, are indeed now out of date and untrue. I have pinned a statement on this, as well as updated the description. I apologise for the error, caused by a delay between recording and publication.
QNAP TS-253D is not a good nas, it read/write drives 24/7, even when you havent been locked into it for days. Atleast one app is leaking data, when its started, you can see something sending 30kb/s. I will not recommend Qnap at all, i have wasted 500$ on one.
Sorry to hear that dude. Have you raised this with the brand? I know a few of the network management apps do test pings and if you install 'live' apps (remote storage, system wide apps) they can stop the system going into standby
*IMPORTANT* - Since the time this comparison was filmed, Asustor have changed their hardware/software support of M.2 NVMe SSDs and now allow them to be used for BOTH storage and/or SSD Caching. This means that both systems have equal support of this feature, not just QNAP (as indicated in the recording).
7:45 We've supported NVMe storage for months now. You've made videos on this.
This is very true and my comments in this video, although correct at the time of recording, are indeed now out of date and untrue. I have pinned a statement on this, as well as updated the description. I apologise for the error, caused by a delay between recording and publication.
@@nascompares No worries!
QNAP TS-253D is not a good nas, it read/write drives 24/7, even when you havent been locked into it for days. Atleast one app is leaking data, when its started, you can see something sending 30kb/s. I will not recommend Qnap at all, i have wasted 500$ on one.
Sorry to hear that dude. Have you raised this with the brand? I know a few of the network management apps do test pings and if you install 'live' apps (remote storage, system wide apps) they can stop the system going into standby