Droboshare, Network Attached Companion for Drobo
|
| List Price: | $229.99 |
| Price: | $194.95 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details |
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com
22 new or used available from $160.00
Average customer review:Product Description
DroboShare is the ideal companion to the award-winning Drobo Storage Robot, allowing you to share data over a local area network. The combined solution automates network management, safeguards your data and lets you easily add capacity, making it the most reliable and expandable networked storage system for sharing your data. With DroboShare, you can now access the information stored on the award-winning Drobo from almost any client on the network, including Windows, Apple and Linux computers. DroboShare can host up to two Drobos, allowing capacities of up to 8TB of storage today, scaling to 32TB as larger disk drives become available. DroboShare connects your Drobo to Gigabit Ethernet networks for sharing data. Just plug Drobo into DroboShare and you are ready to go. Avoid complex network configurations. You can unplug the Drobo and connect it directly to a computer when required then reconnect Drobo to the DroboShare for sharing files with other users. With DroboShare you can choose NTFS (Windows), HFS+ (Mac OS X), EXT3 (Linux) or FAT32 (Various). DroboShare supports standard network protocols allowing access to its data from almost any client. DroboShare is designed for office and home environments where users need a reliable, easy to use device for sharing and backing up files via a network. Drobo is an ideal solution for professionals and individuals who need to store large amounts of data. Drobo enthusiasts include small business owners, creative professionals, graphic designers, photographers, video editors, and educators amongst others. Fully automated storage you don't have to manage Shares up to 2 Drobos Power - 12VDC at 0.5Amp File System Options - Linux EXT3, Mac OS X HFS+, Windows NTFS, and Cross-Platform FAT32 Dimensions - Width 6.0 x Height 1.75 x Length 10.7 (152.4x44.5x271.8mm) Weight - 2 pounds 4 ounces (1.02 Kg)
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1698 in Consumer Electronics
- Brand: Data Robotics
- Model: 905-00001-001
- Platform: Windows
- Format: CD
- Dimensions: 8.80" h x 21.20" w x 34.00" l, 2.20 pounds
- CPU: AMD Athlon 1 GHz
- Memory: 128000MB DRAM
- Hard Disk: 1GB
- Processors: 1
- Networking: Hi-Speed USB
- Native resolution: 640x480
- Display size: 669.2913385827
Features
- Green Power Indicator - Power on, DroboShare ready
- Green Data Transfer Indicator - Ethernet Activity
- Interface - 10/100/1000 Ethernet
- Network topology - Shares data on a single subnet
- USB 2.0 Type A Interface to Drobo
Customer Reviews
Nice but too slow
This is a neat product, much like the original Drobo device in that is very easy to setup and use.
The big problem, however, is that it is very slow. I expected some added latency with this device but I have to say that it is much more significant than I was hoping. The device goes into a sleep mode after a period of inactivity, so waking it up takes some added time, 3 or 4 seconds maybe. But even after it is spun up, it is still quiet slow, particularly when I am moving files around or flipping through photos. This is the first personal home NAS device I've used so maybe this amount of slowness is typical with these things.
The convenience of being able to access my Drobo easily from any computer in the house is worth it to me and it integrates very nicely with my Drobo, so I am keeping it.
Update 23 October 2008:
I can't deal with it anymore. It is just too slow. I am going to look at other options. I should have just done this in the first place.
Extremely unreliable
To provide a little background on me: I'm a software developer by trade. I have built numerous PCs including a server that was using a RocketRaid RAID-5 controller. I switched to Drobo and DroboShare because, after my RAID array became critical, I could not find an adequate device that could support my desire for RAID 1+0. At this point, I just wanted something that worked. Just to make the point clearly: I'm technically savvy; I have a fairly good idea of what I speak.
I bought a 2nd Gen Drobo and a DroboShare about a week ago. While the Drobo is performing well enough, DroboShare has proven out the opposite.
DroboShare is supposed to act as a NAS head for Drobo. In this simple capacity, DroboShare generally fails. While DroboShare will connect to my network and performs adequately, it does so for brief periods of times. The DroboShare spontaneously loses connectivity to the Drobo within an hour of being connected! At this point, the only way that I can make Drobo responsive once again is to cycle the power! Interestingly, the DroboShare will still respond to pings. However, I could no longer SSH in nor access the storage attached to the DroboShare.
Unfortunately, you can only determine the severe unreliability of DroboShare upon signing up for DroboSpace. Data Robotics sagely made a valid S/N a requirement for registering on DroboSpace. This has the benefit, for them, of keeping prospective customers from realizing how terrible DroboShare truly is. Reviewing the DroboSpace forums, there are a multitude of posts discussing lost connectivity as well as anemic performance (i.e., 15MB/s on a supposedly gigabit device). Also, from reading the forums, it becomes fairly clear that Data Robotics technical support is extremely poor.
Given all of the above, caveat emptor! DroboShare is very much an alpha product that should not be on the market. While it may work for some, it was an utter failure for this user.
Too slow for a network drive
The data transfer over the network is slow that it does not meet the standard of today's network drive. You probably won't notice it if you copy a file or two. But if you try to copy large files (over gigabyte), you may want come back in a few hours. Trust me, I have other network drives at home in comparison to the Droboshare. In addition, it's overprice for something that doesn't perform.





