1 Terabyte media server

The geekiest thing one can ask for Xmas? Niveus A/V Storage Server offers a stunning capacity 1 Terabyte connectable to your home network. How much can you stuff into 1TB? 670,000 high quality photos, 100 hours of HDTV content, 1500h of digital home video, 3330h of lossless compressed music... But better take it easy when you are telling about this to your mom and dad, since this baby has a price tag of $2999.
The award winning Niveus “A/V” Storage Server brings 1 Terabyte (1000 Gigabytes) to your always-on home network. This is the ideal solution for anyone looking to store all their digital media onto a single device that allows accessibility, reliability, and data redundancy of the home's most valuable digital assets.
Source: NiveusMedia

Written by: Lasse Penttinen @ 18 Nov 2004 9:16
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  • 18 comments
  • pulsar

    I think a couple of large capacity zip drives would do the job just as well & at a fraction of the cost, can't really see the need to spend so much money on ONLY 1 terabyte.
    My system, 2 hard drives & my zip drive gives me 300gig of storage. Also I can transfer files just in case. Imagine putting all your music & vid files in & it gets corrupted! In fact who the hell would fork out that much for so little. I think somebody is trying to make a lot of money for next to nothing.
    I wouldn't get one on principal. Do these manufacturers not realise how knowledgable we all are? Or are we viewed as just plain stupid & will buy anything? Which bonehead gave them an award? Probably an illiterate blindman who has lived in a cave for the past 1000yrs.
    Well you asked for my opinion!!

    18.11.2004 10:04 #1

  • Toiletman

    The storage space is so big it's taking up the whole of my Christmas List... =P

    18.11.2004 10:05 #2

  • pcshateme

    Pulsar i completely disagree- do the math thats $2.99 a gigabyte- pretty good deal- but even better when you consider that its alot less cumbersome than a bunch of hard drives working together, and if your running a bussiness thats enough for 100 computers. (you dont need much space for individual terminals)

    18.11.2004 10:13 #3

  • pulsar

    I guess if you are a business then it may make sense, but I still would prefer the flexibility of zip drives. With the way the market goes in the UK, the equivilant cost for 1 terabyte is less than 1150 US dollars. which equates to less than 1dollar 15cents per gig. I do not think the drive on offer at afterdawn is not value for money at all. My basis for comparison is the 250 gig Maxtor USB2 zip drive(HD-031-MD) I would rather have those 4 zips for maximum cost effectiveness. Here is the website I get my bits from,
    http://www.overclockers.co.uk/acatalog/External_Hard_Drives.html
    I realise it is in the UK, but I would imagine you could get a similar deal where you are.

    Athlon2600(2.25),120gigHDD0(SP2),80gigHDD1(SP1),120gig zip, 1gigRAM, GeForceFX5600ultra -(256DDR),MSI k72n Delta, (180FSB), aero7 coolermaster, samsung cd/dvd combo, Piodata DVR108DX, Sony DRU 510a,Pioneer DVR-108, Antec PlusView server case (lots of ligh

    18.11.2004 14:20 #4

  • diabolos

    The drives biggest benifit is its small size plus its quite operation. $3000 does seem a little high but most people wont need to upgrade from one tera by christmas 2005. The possiblity of someone buying another one soon would be unlikely. Anyway, typicaly half of the drive space would be used, the other half would be used for back-up (RAID). Your paying for easy of use. I would give it an award if it came out the box with a RAID 5 configuration and software that maid it as easy to use as a plug-in play device, plus a simple network setup (like connect cable, bundled software does the rest). I think thats what they did and what your asked to pay for.

    18.11.2004 18:27 #5

  • rarthurb

    I remember my first XT-turbo 640k ram 20 meg hd 1-360 floppy, 1 5.25 floppy. I Thought what will I ever do with all those megs on that hd? A lot more than I'll ever need.....every time I have said "thats' all I'll ever need" , true to moores law in 18 months I needed more...now I believe in Bob's Law, I never Believe in what I Believe...huh?

    18.11.2004 21:42 #6

  • indienemo

    anyone know what access speed this uses? or if like it says ''network'', would it be able to transfer data at 1000mbps? Otherwise its not worth it in my opinion...

    19.11.2004 05:08 #7

  • Kershek

    The reliability and data redundancy are the likely reasons for the higher price. If you have high-output RAID controllers with redundant power supplies, redundant data paths, and other server-class architecture features, you will pay more for the "peace of mind" that the system won't go down easily.

    19.11.2004 05:36 #8

  • jetblac

    This seems a bit out dated with phillips 300GB optical disc around the corner

    19.11.2004 11:42 #9

  • Escobar22

    They have a 1 TB external HD from Lacie for under a grand, so this isn't worth it.

    19.11.2004 12:39 #10

  • Escobar22

    They have a 1 TB external HD from Lacie for under a grand, so this isn't worth it.

    19.11.2004 12:39 #11

  • djscoop

    just got that 1 TB LaCie drive for $999. Works fantastic. Has firewire 2 also, but not ethernet.

    19.11.2004 15:44 #12

  • flip218

    good god $999!!! I got my 250 gig's for $125 each ... brand new.

    Dell 8250, Pentium 4 3.06GHz HT, 1.5GB RDRAM(PC1066), HD's (1x200, 3x250), XP Pro SP1
    NEC ND-2510A, Lite-On SOHD-167T, Plextor Premium, 128MB ATI All-In-Wonder 9800 Pro

    Forum rules!! http://forums.afterdawn.com/thread_view.cfm/2487

    20.11.2004 01:20 #13

  • djscoop

    an external for $125? what brand is it, and where did you get it? If you have 4 daisy-chained together, I don't think the performance is as good as having 2 500GB drives in a RAID array.

    2200+ Athlon XP / 1GB DDR333 / MSI KT3 Ultra 2 / Win2k Pro & WinXP Pro / 500GB SATA / DVR-105 / Pro Tools MBOX

    20.11.2004 09:55 #14

  • flip218

    oh ... no all internal

    Dell 8250, Pentium 4 3.06GHz HT, 1.5GB RDRAM(PC1066), HD's (1x200, 3x250), XP Pro SP1
    NEC ND-2510A, Lite-On SOHD-167T, Plextor Premium, 128MB ATI All-In-Wonder 9800 Pro

    Forum rules!! http://forums.afterdawn.com/thread_view.cfm/2487

    20.11.2004 10:14 #15

  • Prisoner

    $3 per gig, that is crazy. I would rather buy some DVD's and runn of multiple DVD drives. Thats at about $0.25 a GB. Think about that math.

    I wont pay more than $1 a gig with Can taxes got my 250Gb for $250 with Can tax (which is a lot). Flip were did you get your 250 for $125, external enclosers are cheap and setup a couple would be nice.

    29.11.2004 04:42 #16

  • flip218

    Quote:Flip were did you get your 250 for $125eBay ... all new, sealed.

    29.11.2004 13:21 #17

  • monis

    hello every one

    can i use this as an internet server? i want to make a email server and a website offering 3.5GB to each user for $4 a month. Is it possible to use maybe two or three of these server and hook em up to each other so its 3 terabyte and use it for my purpose? do you guys think that people will sign up for my service that i plan to offer? 3.5GB for $4/month?

    People, please give my your feedback.
    thanks.
    Monis.

    23.12.2004 09:09 #18

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