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Iomega's New Unix (Optional) NAS Appliance

Tora writes: "Zip disk maker Iomega has released a sexy new 1U Network Attached Storage server with an option for either Unix or Microsoft Windows as the OS. Their previous NAS offering was Windows-only; it is nice to see both OS options available, although they do not yet have pricing up for the Windows version."

13 of 198 comments (clear)

  1. Iomega.. by PopeAlien · · Score: 4, Flamebait

    Mmm. Boy I hope these aren't susceptible to the click of death. Ah yes, the reliability of the zip disk..

    1. Re:Iomega.. by DocSnyder · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The "click of death" was very bad for Iomega. About six years ago I had a Jaz drive with six disks. As soon as the first became unusable, the Jaz took all the other ones with it, which became probably my worst data loss. If anyone of my coworkers asked me if I would recommend a Iomega NAS device, that is, any Iomega device, what would you really expect me to say, regardless of whether it might be the greatest device ever?

  2. I'm confused by Hemos+(editor) · · Score: 4, Funny

    Iomega's New Unix (Optional) NAS Appliance

    But I was told that Unix is like a dark, moldy basement and I need to find a way out through Windows. :-(

    Slashdot v2.0

  3. It's too bad Iomega is dying anyway by b.foster · · Score: 4, Informative
    One of my college buddies took a job at Iomega after graduation because it was an up-and-coming company - back in its heydey, most new PCs came with a shiny Zip100 drive next to the floppy, and times were good. Iomega used to be one of the tech world's few great innovators - and the Jaz concept was pure genius, especially compared with the primitive Bernoulli boxes that Jaz superceded.

    Unfortunately, times have been tough for Iomega. They haven't posted a profit for several years. On a related note, they haven't come up with a decent new product for several years. Instead of innovating, they tried to get into the business of producing cheap, commodity devices (like tape drives and CD writers) that nobody was interested in buying. Coupled with the Click of Death problems, this new strategy backfired and sent Iomega into the red - where they have remained ever since.

    And that brings me to my story: I talked to my buddy on the phone a few weeks ago, and he said that morale is low at Iomega. The company has been slashing jobs and pay every quarter, and he has had to lay off many of his subordinates. He said that the NAS idea is a last-ditch effort to squeeze profits out of a dying industry, and that Iomega's business plan is to sell the NAS devices at a loss (to stay competitive with the big guys) and to sell overpriced support contracts to try to stay in business. For his sake I hope it works out, but for all intents and purposes Iomega is dead. But nobody said that mormons have any business sense anyway, so I don't blame them.

    /B.

  4. Re:No GigaE? What a waste :) by klieber · · Score: 4, Funny

    You're right -- GigE would be a natural option for this device.

    That's probably why they included it.

    http://www.iomega.com/nas/p410_sys.html

    --
    Gentoo Linux http://gentoo.org/
  5. COD by TimButterfield · · Score: 5, Funny

    If the click of death happens in a data center and there is no one there to hear it, does it make a sound?

  6. Re:Good. by Wesley+Felter · · Score: 4, Informative

    Nope; NetApp implements snapshots using copy-on-write, so they consume less disk space, take effectively no time to create, and are atomic with respect to filesystem operations (so there won't be any problems if you're accessing the filesystem while the snapshot is in progress). Check out their File System Design for an NFS File Server Appliance white paper for the technical details if you're interested.

  7. Hmmm... by NetJunkie · · Score: 4, Interesting

    They are light on the details. What speed drives? What kind of internal controller? Anything in this box redundant or is all my storage gone when a power supply fails? Things like that are important, and they don't seem to mention it when I looked. I also question buying something like this from someone that makes nothing else even close.

    We use the Compaq TaskSmart 2400N NAS. Yes, it runs Win2K but it's rock solid and very good. It's built around a normal Compaq server so we already have spares. It can do up to 10TB in Cluster config. It uses all standard Compaq drives and parts which can be shared among other systems. Plus, you can manage it from Insight Manager. It also exports out to NFS for UNIX clients.

    It seems anyone that needed 1/2 TB on a NAS would already have other servers and would be better served going with their vendor's answer, assuming they had a good one.

  8. Iomewhat? by tcc · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Those guys that have a buttload of dysfuntionnal 1GB JAZ drives?

    Those same guys that brought the BUZ video editing card that ended up with no good drivers and being just another expensive scsi card since the video part wasn't working half decently? (yeah I got one)

    Those same people that had loads of trouble with their portable cdr drives?

    Those same people selling the infamous Click! and never took off and left you with an expensive useless piece of ....

    Hell, at the price they sell their stuff, I'd still go with my solution: IDE based, for performance, 3ware board with loads of drives. You get linux/windows support. Medium storage, good performance, Adaptec board with 4 drives, and POS version, well if you thought about getting NAS (which is a tad too expensive in my opinion) you don't need to consider a POS solution :).

    Anyways, with their track record, I'd go with a Maxtor NAS or any other company before Iomega, and even if there would be only Iomega in that market, I'd make my own solution with off the shelf parts before trusting my data to them, Did that mistake too many times already.

    --
    --- Metamoderating abusive downgraders since my 300th post.
    1. Re:Iomewhat? by rtaylor · · Score: 5, Funny

      Fool me once, shame on you.

      Fool me 5 times, shame on me?

      --
      Rod Taylor
  9. Get The Windows Version by nuintari · · Score: 4, Funny

    It can suffer from the click of death, AND the blue screen of death! Double bonus!

    --

    --Nuintari

    slashdot : where an opinion can be wrong.

  10. Score +4? by Wakko+Warner · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes indeed, there are absolutely no NAS solutions out there that don't lock you into a Microsoft-centric solution.

    How'd this get +4?

    - A.P.

    --
    "Remember when the U.S. had a drug problem, and then we declared a War On Drugs, and now you can't buy drugs anymore?"
  11. Sigh...enough about COD. by Chanc_Gorkon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    COD happened YEARS ago. Like OVER 5! I have had two Zip drives myself and can't say anything bad about them. One was the SLOW parallel port one that got knocked around cuz I took it back and forth to work. For the last two round of PC upgrades at work, all machines have had Zip drives installed. Zips in a user base af about 1500-3000 computers. I talk to the PC guys alot (I am mainframe/UNIX dude). I have heard NOTHING about Zip drive failures. Creative Labs Infra CD-ROM drives sucked and I heard about it too (especially since my boss had one...thing would suck the tray back in immedeately after ejecting it). Over 1500 drives in service with not much failing...it either means they just work, or they ain't using em. The Iomega COD think comes back every time Iomega releases a new thing. Yeah they made mistakes, but I think they have done well. Yeah, the clik disk/HipZip did suck, but only cuz it took them too long to develop it and by the time the 40 MB disks came out, CF cards were well above the 40 MB mark and cheaper then they once were. I just got a 128 MB CF card for my camera and it was only about 90 bucks (could have had it for 80, but I was lazy). Clik was just too little to late and Iomega ain't the only company to do this. This bash Iomega because of a problem 5 years ago is getting a little freaking old.

    --

    Gorkman