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Forum Discussion
ksor1
Jun 26, 2025Aspirant
Netgear DUO admin site ??
I've had this NASdrive for years and it has worked well - I renewed the discs 1 time - nice ! I had it running under Windows 10 for most of the years - but had the problem that I could NOT get ac...
- Jun 26, 2025
ksor1 wrote:
I sometimes just run the RAIDAR program
It'd be helpful to know if you have the original Duo, or if you have the Duo v2.
The original Duo
- says ReadyNAS Duo on the front panel and in RAIDar
- runs 4.1.x firmware (RAIDar should tell you that)
The v2
- says ReadyNAS Duo v2 on the front panel and in RAIDar
- runs 5.3.x firmware
ksor1 wrote:
the NAS is still assigned 192.168.1.2
Then you can access the NAS web ui using https://192.168.1.2/admin. But you need to use Firefox, and set security.tls.version.min to 1 (browse to about:config and search for the setting).
If you don't recall the admin password, the default for the original Duo is netgear1. The default for the v2 is password.
ksor1 wrote:
I used the 'name' \\192.168.1.2\media" to get access in Windows 11 ... and in fact it worked for 3-4 days
It'll be easier to sort this out after you get admin access.
StephenB
Jun 27, 2025Guru - Experienced User
ksor1 wrote:IF I wants to do any thing at the admin site I'll have to do the config changes - did I get it right ?
Yes. The reason is that most browsers (chrome, edge, etc) require TLS 1.2, and your old NAS only has TLS 1.0. The setting change in FireFox allows TLS 1.0 connections.
As I mentioned, if you are familiar with SSH there is a way to modify the NAS so you could use http://192.168.1.2/admin (which right now will just redirect you to https://192.168.1.2). That would let you use Edge. Have you any experience with the linux command line interface?
ksor1 wrote:
I understand I'm using the ReadyNAS as a GUEST and then it's an unsafe practice - did I get it right ?
Well, Microsoft considers it unsafe, and has gradually tightened up guest/anonymous access. It is easier to use a credential than it is to fight that.
ksor1 wrote:IF SO I'll try to create a new user on the NAS ... but go slow because the whole family use this daily and I'l be stoned out of town if the can't use it for days :-(
Just creating the user account won't disrupt anything. Then you can try creating a windows credential that uses it. If it fails for some reason, you can just delete the windows credential.
Note you only need one account - the entire family can share the credentials.
Do you have any backup of the files on the NAS? Devices can fail at any time, and yours is ~15 years old. So you should put a backup plan in place. Perhaps get a USB drive, and copy all the files from the NAS to the USB drive on a regular basis. FreeFileSync is one of several Windows utilities you can use for that.
- ksor1Jun 27, 2025Aspirant
THX again for your advices and I'll try - and I think I can do it :-)
BackUp - yes, I have a backup plan - in fact more - for weeks, month, quarters and years.
Linux command line interface ... no experience but I have tried to run a mashine once in my younger days but left it because of ' too many 'do it youself details' - buit it sounds interesting if I could use Edge ... that's my plan IF I manage to install W11 on more of my machines - if it's not TOO complicated and if you can just pull it out of your sleaves then I would be very happy :-)
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