I will start off. The Synology DS1812+ from the review. 142 Days uptime with the reboot occurring due to a DSM 4.2 update.
That has got to be a record for ANY version of Windows, much less Windows 2000! Impressive.I have a Windows 2000 box at work that will be up for four years on 7/24.
From what I was told, it would have had a much longer uptime. It was shut down 4 years ago because it needed to move to a new datacenter. "Old timers" around here believe it was up for almost as long before that.That has got to be a record for ANY version of Windows, much less Windows 2000! Impressive.
I've got the other extreme going on. Have been running for exactly 200 days on nothing more than a live-cd image.My power is neither reliable nor safe enough to test uptime for more than a month or two with the weather here.
I have UPSes on the 24/7 systems, but I pull the plug on them when its nonstop lightning for a few hours.
It made it!From what I was told, it would have had a much longer uptime. It was shut down 4 years ago because it needed to move to a new datacenter. "Old timers" around here believe it was up for almost as long before that.
Equally impressive: the 2005 last login date. What kind of HW Raid 5? Adaptec 3000 series?
Running OpenFiler & Hardware RAID6 (bad choice as we have a WA of over 80% most of the time).
That is great! Does QNAP have any compelling software upgrades that you are waiting to try in the last two years? Trying to deduce why no maintenance downtime in that period.
This is my QNAP TS-859U-RP+ running as an iSCSI target
It works exactly the way I want right now. It only does iSCSI and nothing else. There is also a newer/faster TS-879U-RP that is running iSCSI backup duty. It's the one that gets the firmware updates.That is great! Does QNAP have any compelling software upgrades that you are waiting to try in the last two years? Trying to deduce why no maintenance downtime in that period.