- Intel Celeron N5095 leads NAS to the fastest of Terramaster, the fastest to date
- The design with four terramet bays F4-425 allows an astounding capacity of 120 TB for the growth of media libraries
- The 4K H.265 decoding in terms of equipment supports Smooth Plex and Emby Streaming
Terramaster introduced the F4-425, a four-bay storage device with network that exchanges older Arm fleas for an Intel Celeron N5095 quad-core processor.
The company promotes this to date as its “fastest” NAS based in Celeron, affirming an increase in performance of 40% compared to previous systems based on ARM.
It targets home users but borrows the lines generally found in high -end storage units, such as 4 GB of DDR4 memory, a network of 2.5 GBE and the possibility of managing video coding and 4K decoding.
Massive storage and controversial draft technology
The transition to Intel X86 architecture positions them closer to entry -level business devices while being marketed as a consumption solution.
The F4-425 supports up to 120 TB to four readers of 30 TB, giving households and small creative teams many cards in the head.
The new Terramaster Traid feat is the most spoken addition, promising up to 30% higher storage efficiency than the traditional raid without sacrificing redundancy.
Although it seems attractive, the complaint justifies a meticulous examination, because the efficiency gains often involve compromise in resilience or recovery speed.
Data protection also includes SPC security parameters, 256-bit TLS encryption, TFSS snapshots and compatibility with CloudSync platforms such as Google Drive, OneDrive and Dropbox.
Terramaster launches the F4-425 as a multimedia center, supporting the 4K H.265 decoding in terms of equipment and direct streaming via Plex, Emby, Jellyfin or UPNP / DLNA.
Integrated algorithms in AI terraphotos can sort the images with faces, pets and scenes, potentially reducing manual organization tasks.
The TNAS mobile application allows initial configuration without PC and allows local or remote synchronization for smartphones backups.
Terrasync adds a synchronization of level files in milliseconds and a recovery system at 32 versions, while the design without Push-Lock tool claims to install readers in ten seconds.
The low noise levels of 21 dB (A) are favored as another characteristic adapted to the house.
The F4-425 is listed at £ 369.99 in the United Kingdom and $ 369.99 in the United States, with a temporary discount of 10%.
This price makes it attractive for home users or small studios.
Although Intel’s N5095 chip is faster than many arm options, the performance of the real world depends on the conditions of the network, the quality of the reader and the maturity of the firmware.