![]() **I’m not going to spend too much time on the setup: if you can work a screwdriver, you can install hard drives into the NAS yourself, Your own private cloud | ![]() ![]() With today marking the release of 5.0, the company’s biggest software update yet, I thought now would be as good a time as any to share my experience. I’ve been putting the Synology DiskStation hardware and brand new DiskStation Manager 5.0 software to the test in recent months to see if I could really benefit from a NAS solution despite all my content already being on the cloud and backed up. Coworkers can’t stop talking about them, and the products have received a lot of praise from many other reviewers as well. That being said, for the last year or so I’ve been hearing more and more about Synology DiskStation products. Around 90% of my content is already stored and accessible from anywhere in the cloud. ![]() My photos are (supposed to) auto backup to Photostream in iCloud, iTunes has all of my music downloadable from all my devices from the cloud, and any important files and everything else go directly to Dropbox or Google Drive. These days most of my content, from photos and movies to back ups of important files for work, are already stored in the cloud. I’ll admit, I’ve never felt the need to purchase network-attached-storage (NAS) hardware for storing and accessing my media or backing up my files.
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