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Forum Discussion
RA-s
Jun 06, 2016Aspirant
4k transcoding
I just got the ReadyNAS 212 and i was wondering that is it capable to transcode in 4k? There are a couple of nas s out there that do offer 4k transcoding. I was wondering if netgear is the right choi...
- Jun 07, 2016
The RN212 can transcode HD to SD for streaming, but it's arm processor simply isn't fast enough to transcode 4K. Generally speaking 4K needs 4x the peformance of 1080p. You have 2x the pixels to process, and the compression algorithms used are more compllex as well. To do that in a low-power device you'd need hardware acceleration, and none of the ReadyNAS use that. Even the RN516 only has an I3 processor.
Overall, one option is to use the NAS for storage, but to do the streaming and perhaps other applications from a different device (setting up an application server). That could be built on an Intel Nuc or some other small form factor PC if desired. It gives you a more modular upgrade path (in practice allowing you to use the NAS for a longer period of time). And it allows you to use any apps you want.
I've been thinking about switching to this concept myself, since I'm already running some applications on a desktop PC (plex being one of them), with a mapped drive to the NAS.
BrianL2
Jun 07, 2016NETGEAR Employee Retired
Hi RA-s,
Unfortunately, none of our ReadyNAS units supports 4k transcoding (this is the product datasheet). With regard to your other question, on which device are you going to stream the media files from your ReadyNAS?
Kind regards,
BrianL
NETGEAR Community Team
RA-s
Jun 07, 2016Aspirant
Thank you for replying. So i was wondering with an update or something, will the hardware of rn212 be able to transcode to 4k in the future at least? or its not powerful enough? if i do stream in 4k it would be only one user at a time and i would stream that to my 4k tv i guess and then if its possible to stream 2k to my phone. Just knowing that it can go above 1080p will be comforting to know that i have an all around product.
I am trying to use plex to stream to my phones, ipad and tivo bolt(4k capable). So far the plex software isnt even adding my videos. I have asked their community a question as well as they have no direct customer service. thats why i was wondering if there was anything else that we can use to stream from readynas 212 . It seems to have very limited apps
Thank you
- StephenBJun 07, 2016Guru - Experienced User
The RN212 can transcode HD to SD for streaming, but it's arm processor simply isn't fast enough to transcode 4K. Generally speaking 4K needs 4x the peformance of 1080p. You have 2x the pixels to process, and the compression algorithms used are more compllex as well. To do that in a low-power device you'd need hardware acceleration, and none of the ReadyNAS use that. Even the RN516 only has an I3 processor.
Overall, one option is to use the NAS for storage, but to do the streaming and perhaps other applications from a different device (setting up an application server). That could be built on an Intel Nuc or some other small form factor PC if desired. It gives you a more modular upgrade path (in practice allowing you to use the NAS for a longer period of time). And it allows you to use any apps you want.
I've been thinking about switching to this concept myself, since I'm already running some applications on a desktop PC (plex being one of them), with a mapped drive to the NAS.
- Retired_MemberJun 09, 2016
StephenB wrote:That could be built on an Intel Nuc or some other small form factor PC if desired. It gives you a more modular upgrade path (in practice allowing you to use the NAS for a longer period of time). And it allows you to use any apps you want.
I've been thinking about switching to this concept myself, since I'm already running some applications on a desktop PC (plex being one of them), with a mapped drive to the NAS.
I have done something similar with a raspberry PI. It's a smart way of adding services to the ReadyNAS. Mount the shares as NFS and do your thing ;)
Of course, if you use a raspberry PI, don't expect to do things where performance matter. Using a NUC (or similar) would be more expensive, but also bring much higher performance and open more possibilities.
- StephenBJun 10, 2016Guru - Experienced User
jak0lantash wrote:
StephenB wrote:
That could be built on an Intel Nuc or some other small form factor PC if desired. It gives you a more modular upgrade path (in practice allowing you to use the NAS for a longer period of time). And it allows you to use any apps you want. I've been thinking about switching to this concept myself, since I'm already running some applications on a desktop PC (plex being one of them), with a mapped drive to the NAS.
I have done something similar with a raspberry PI. It's a smart way of adding services to the ReadyNAS. Mount the shares as NFS and do your thing ;)
Of course, if you use a raspberry PI, don't expect to do things where performance matter. Using a NUC (or similar) would be more expensive, but also bring much higher performance and open more possibilities.
Some of the services I'm thinking about either aren't available on linux (real itunes with home sharing for instance) or have significant limitations (crashplan). So I've been thinking a Windows OS (or something that can run a windows VM).
Though a raspberry PI has it's own appeal. Could do both of course :smileyhappy: :smileyhappy:
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