- Streams 4K Video, backup your phone and always jumps cloud storage
- The Terramaster F4 SSD promises the confidentiality of the house, but can discharge all the responsibility for maintenance to the user
- Up to 32 TB of SSD Speed seems impressive, but your router can do it a bottleneck
While local storage continues to evolve, some brands now offer compact network systems that focus on confidentiality, speed and versatility of the media.
The F4 SSD Terramaster supports up to 32 TB of SSD storage using four 8 TB SSDs, and supports file systems such as Ext4, BTRFS, Exfat and NTFS.
It bypass the need for cloud-based platforms by incorporating the encryption at the material level and the segregation of data for more than 20 user accounts.
Performance measures comply with household use cases
The device is powered by a Rockchip RK3568 processor based on a quad-core arm, a 2.0 GHz processor, with material decoding support for codecs and H.264 and H.265 resolutions up to 4K at 60FPS.
It also includes 8 GB of RAM DDR4, expandable to 32 GB using two SODIMM locations.
Network capacities include a 2.5GBe port and a USB type 2 USB interface of 10 Gbit / s, while HDMI 2.0 offers a 4K display output.
Terramaster F4 SSD can also broadcast to televisions and tablets using standard protocols like UPNP and DLNA, and the media servers such as Plex, Jellyfin and Emby suggests that it will be compatible with the majority of the configurations of the house.
The F4 SSD is built around an Ethernet 5G port, offering speeds up to five times faster than the standard Gigabit connections, taking charge of high speed scenarios.
However, in practical terms, users will probably be limited by the speed of their broader domestic network, not only by NAS equipment.
Software features include backup tools (including Cloud Sync and Snapshot), AI photo management, VPN server and remote access via TNAS.ONLINE, which allows downloads and downloads via the Cloud.
The security features include Traid, a flexible table system that optimizes space while offering redundancy.
It also supports RAID 0/1/5/6/10, JBOD, and includes tools such as Smart, Bad Block Scan, SSD Trim and Hot Spare Management.
Another layer’s SPC control system is another layer that restricts applications access according to verified authorizations.
The F4 SSD also allows two-way synchronization with cloud platforms like Google Drive and Dropbox.
This hybrid capacity, although useful, may seem counter-intuitive in a product designed to replace dependence on clouds.
The NAS also offers a toolless SSD installation with a drawer style case, which makes the reader levels accessible to beginners.
Cooling is managed by a silent convection fan system, apparently keeping a rescue noise around 19 dB, such as the SSD Terramaster. Such silence can be beneficial in environments sensitive to noise such as studios or home rooms.
The system operates on TOS 6.0 and supports up to 128 user accounts, 128 groups of user and 8 synchronization tasks for shared folders.
This makes it suitable for advanced users or small studios requiring access to high -speed private data.
The SSD Terramaster is ambitious, but its value will depend on whether users fully use its features.
Via Techpowerup