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Whereas the AS6104T sits under the Asustor Home to Power User banner, the AS6204T sits firmly in the Power User to Business group category. It has a dedicated hardware AES-NI encryption engine, which will appeal to small business because of the data prote...
Latest Intel Celeron quadcore processor, Dual channel memory support, ADM 2.6 OS, Support for 10TB drives, Lockable drive bay doors, Generally very strong performance...
RAID 6 performance is a little weak in some areas.
The combination of a quad-core processor and dual channel memory provides the Asustor AS6204T with strong performance, with the NAS topping the 100MB/s mark in a number of our tests. Although the performance is very strong in most of the arrays tested wit...
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Want to know more about two of Asustor's top NASes? Want one? Amazon: 2 Bay: Check out our awesome website! Vessel: —-——————————————————————————————- Want to get anything nice? Be use to use these! Amazon.co.uk : Amazon.com : Amazon.de : Amazon.at : Amaz...
Nice features...
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Regular readers of AVForums might notice the similarity of the ASUSTOR AS6204T to the recently reviewed AS6102T NAS (Network-attached Storage) device. In actual fact, it's only because of a mix-up at the warehouse that we received this flagship NAS from A...
Assuming you are looking at the very specific requirement of an all-in-one network storage device rolled up with a media player and/or server, then the ASUSTOR AS6204T makes for an absolutely terrific choice. Setup is extremely straightforward, even for a...
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Asustor is the storage spin-off of laptop giant Asus and has built up a solid range of well-priced NAS appliances. Its latest AS6204T continues this tradition as this four-bay desktop box has one of Intel's latest ‘Braswell' 1.6GHz Celeron N3150 processor...
Reasonably priced, Speedy NAS and IP SAN performance, Decent backup apps, Very quiet...
Not as good value as Qnap's TS453A, Minimal cloud storage apps...
The AS6204T delivers good storage performance and is well-suited to small businesses that don't want many bells and whistles...
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Another black-box NAS may seem soporific, but the Asustor AS6204T packs Intel's latest Braswell-based SoC. That Celeron N3150 consumes very little power and adds hardware-accelerated AES encryption to a lower price point.Asustor was actually the first NAS...
The Asustor AS6204T has more IO options than most will ever need but the features are there should you chose to use them. This happens more often than not. Once you have a NAS appliance at home its easy to start offloading tasks to the small low-power box...
This model doesn't give users as much bang for the buck compared to the Asustor units we've tested before. It's still a very powerful system for the price...
The Asustor AS6204T doesn't bring a lot of new features to the table but it does deliver some that, when needed, make this a unique product. We would like to see it ship with more system memory or a lower price point to compare better to other new NAS app...
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Our lives are exploding with content, including video, photos, music and plenty of documents. NAS Drives are perfect for this, and whether in a family or a small business situation a NAS Drive can be an invaluable central storage device.You can access the...
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At first we would like to thank ASUSTOR for offering us a sample of their AS6204T 4-bay NAS model for testing and reviewing.“Founded in 2011, ASUSTOR Inc. is a leading innovator and provider of private cloud storage (network attached storage) and video su...
The AS6204T 4-bay NAS from ASUSTOR, equipped with a low-power Celeron J3160 Braswell CPU and 4GB of RAM can handle without issue the well-optimized ADM OS which transforms it into a machine with multiple functions: backups, different service hosting, virt...
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MORE: Best SSDs For The Money MORE: Latest St...
The Asustor AS6204T has more IO options than most will ever need but the features are there should you chose to use them. This happens more often than not. Once you have a NAS appliance at home its easy to start offloading tasks to the small lowpower box...
This model doesn't give users as much bang for the buck compared to the Asustor units we've tested before. It's still a very powerful system for the price.
The Asustor AS6204T doesn't bring a lot of new features to the table but it does deliver some that, when needed, make this a unique product. We would like to see it ship with more system memory or a lower price point to compare better to other new NAS a...
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Asustor is one of the recent entrants in the NAS market. Over the last couple of years, they have tried to play in the same space as QNAP and Synology, targeting power users and SMBs. They have a wide variety of hardware platforms to choose from, ranging...
In order to keep testing consistent across all 4-bay units, we performed all our expansion / rebuild testing as well as power consumption evaluation with the unit configured in RAID-5. The disks used for benchmarking (Western Digital WD4000FYYZ) were also...
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After roughly 8 years of testing NAS servers i still get asked quite a lot by both regular consumers and people of the electronics industry as to why i refer to network attached storage devices as servers. We did answer that last time we had one such revi...
Build Quality, First To Use The New Intel Celeron N3150 Advanced QuadCore CPU, Cherryview Intel HD Graphics GPU, Excellent Performance, Features, 4GB DDR3L RAM (Expandable To 8GB), Power Consumption / Noise Levels / Temperatures, 2 Gigabit Ethernet Ports...
Surveillance Center Needs Work, Virtualization App Only Accessible Via ASUSTOR Portal...
When we sat down to compare the old (2013 model) J1900 Quad-Core Celeron model to the new (2015 model) N3150 we were surprised to see that Intel had lowered its clocks (1.6GHz from 2GHz) and the clocks of the new HD graphics (320/640MHz from 688/854MHz)...
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While all the NAS reviews that we have done over the years have mainly been about the big boys of network attached storage systems, it is pleasing to see that ASUSTOR as a relative newcomer is pulling out all stops to play in the big league.Today we are c...
As stated before, we don't always do a lot of testing to see if we can get close to the claimed maximum performance speeds. There is no point to it and we're not equipped to eke out the last possible bit using all sorts of performance benchmarks. It's...
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