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Forum Discussion
epeleg
Oct 21, 2020Tutor
UTF8 with NFS & Windows 10 on ReadyNAS Ultra 6 Plus with 4.2.31 Firmware
Hi, I had a Hard drive die and basicly ended up getting a new computer with new windows professional installed. When I tries to connect to my NAS shares using: Net use x: \\ip_addr\share as I wa...
StephenB
Oct 22, 2020Guru - Experienced User
epeleg wrote:
Though it is possibly to install SMB1 back the linked document recommends agianst it.
NFS isn't any more secure than SMB1 (unless you use Kerberos, which the NAS doesn't do). So personally I'd just enable SMB1 on the Win10 PC.
Another option is to convert the NAS to run OS-6, which would give you current SMB.
epeleg
Oct 22, 2020Tutor
Thanks StephanB,
It looks like I don't have many other alternatives right now.
as for upgrading to OS-6 I would be happy to do but,
1) I was under the impression that this is not a Netgear supported upgrad update (plz correct me if I am wrong).
2) From what I read this wipes the Device clean of all its Data... this will require my to temporarily move all the current data
to other devices on my network which will both take time and also might end up in data loss.
(Also I am not even sure that I have enough empty storage on my other computers to hold all this information,
and internet speed here makes any upload related solution non practical)
Thanks,
Eyal
- StephenBOct 22, 2020Guru - Experienced User
epeleg wrote:
1) I was under the impression that this is not a Netgear supported upgrad update (plz correct me if I am wrong).
Netgear doesn't support it. So you wouldn't be able to engage paid Netgear support (including data recovery services) if you convert it.
People of course will have different views on how much that matters for a NAS that went end-of-life in 2013.
epeleg wrote:
2) From what I read this wipes the Device clean of all its Data... this will require my to temporarily move all the current data
to other devices on my network which will both take time and also might end up in data loss.
(Also I am not even sure that I have enough empty storage on my other computers to hold all this information,
and internet speed here makes any upload related solution non practical)It does require a factory reset.
But it is concerning that you have no backup plan in place for your NAS. Whether you convert it or not, you should take care of that. RAID isn't enough to keep your data safe.
USB disks aren't that expensive (US prices for 8 TB USB drives are less than $150). Over the long run, investing in backup is better than paying for data recovery - often less expensive, and much more effective at avoiding data loss.
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