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TUAW review: LaCie Network Space 2 low-cost NAS

Everybody needs storage, and lots of it.

The race for space began when we started taking digital pictures, accelerated when we began purchasing music online, and went positively orbital when movies and TV went digital. While big drives in desktop machines are becoming commonplace (1 TB drives are now standard in most iMac configurations), what happens when you have a couple of laptops or older machines that you want to back up, or if you want to share data with others in your office or home? That's when some sort of network-attached storage comes in handy.

Network-attached storage is nothing new; you can even consider Apple's US$299 Time Capsule to be a wireless NAS. Now storage manufacturer LaCie has released the US$190 Network Space 2 device, providing 1 TB of storage and speedy connectivity. LaCie provided TUAW with a Network Space 2 for review purposes, so we put it through its paces before sending it back to the company. Read on for a review of this attractive and useful peripheral.
The Network Space 2 is an upgraded version of a previous LaCie device. Both versions come in a sleek enclosure created by award-winning product designer Neil Poulton. The enclosure is quite small (4.6 x 7.6 x 1.8 inches -- 117 x 193 x 45 mm), so the Network Space 2 can provide unobtrusive storage capacity in almost any home or office environment.

Fortunately, Poulton chose to go with a small and unobtrusive AC adapter as well. It's a tiny brick that comes with your choice of a standard North American 110V and two European 220V plugs that can be snapped on as required. The same box that contains the power brick also has Gigabit Ethernet and USB cables tucked inside.

Setup of the Network Space 2 is, quite literally, plug and play. I plugged the device into a power outlet, plugged the Ethernet cable into the Network Space 2 on one end and my AirPort Extreme on the other, and then turned it on. With no configuration required, the device showed up in the Finder with the default name of NetworkSpace2. Total time from opening the box to having a terabyte of network-attached storage was about a minute.

The Network Space 2 can be many things; it's a location for private and public file shares, it's a UPnP/DLNA and iTunes media server, it can be set up to do unattended torrent downloads, and it's a handy Time Machine backup device. You can even use it to do such clever tricks as backing up a memory card or flash drive automatically when one is plugged into the USB port.

Customized configuration of the Network Space 2 is possible, and a snap to do, through the included software. The LaCie Network Assistant application runs continuously, providing a way to easily bring up the configuration window or open the full Network Space 2 control panel in a Web browser.

The configuration window has two simple tabs: one for setting up the network connection to your device, and one for declaring which shares you wish to auto-mount. The full control panel is accessible through your Web browser and adds much more granular control of the Network Space 2. The individual screens and descriptions can be found in the gallery at the end of this review.

For users who may want the convenience of directly-attached storage for one reason or another, that's possible as well. All you need to do is plug the Network Space 2 directly into your Mac using the USB 2.0 cable. Of course, this won't be as fast as using a Gigabit Ethernet network (which operates at up to 65 MB/second), but if you wish to connect directly to the device for a slower (up to 30 MB/second) transfer, it is possible.

One of the few complaints I have about the device is that it's not expandable. Of course, if your router has a number of Ethernet ports on it, you could theoretically add a Network Space 2 to each port in order to expand your storage. However, unlike the new Data Robotics Drobo FS, the Network Space 2 comes in only one size -- 1 TB. Now that 2 TB 3.5" drives are becoming commonplace and dropping in price, I'm hopeful that we'll see a 2 TB version of the Network Space 2 soon. My only other concern is that the device seems to run quite hot. On the other hand, it is extremely quiet, so the lack of a fan might be an acceptable tradeoff.

For those who need affordability and easy setup, the Network Space 2 is an excellent choice for Network Attached Storage. I have no problems recommending this device to anyone who needs another terabyte of storage and wants to share it on a local network. At a price of $190, the Network Space 2 is a very affordable way to add a good-sized, shared storage space to any home or small-office network.

LaCie considers the Network Space 2 to be a "prosumer" device, so it comes with a 2 year limited warranty. Other companies offer similar warranties; OWC's drives are often guaranteed for 3 years, while the Data Robotics Drobo boxes usually have a 1 or 2 year warranty.

Check out the gallery below for photos of the Network Space 2 in action, as well as a description of the various control panels that are available to users.

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Everybody needs storage, and lots of it. The race for space began when we started taking digital pictures, accelerated when we began...
 

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Paul

Does it only use SMB? Can it do AFS?

April 14 2010 at 7:53 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
kindakrazy

"Everybody needs storage, and lots of it."

Should be "Everybody needs reliable storage, and lots of it."

And for any LaCie product, you can pretty much rule out "reliable".

April 12 2010 at 11:45 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Shimmer

The only hard drives that have ever failed on me have been LaCie drives. The last one I had crapped out after 9 months. Of course LaCie replaced it under warranty (one year), but then the replacement died after 3 and a half months, and since the original purchase was outside the one year warranty they wouldn't do anything for me.

No one should ever buy a LaCie product, period.

April 12 2010 at 11:36 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
HC

Just with Expandability, this product is expandable via USB on the front port which you can you to either extract data from any storage device you plug in to it or you use it to expand the capacity of the drive and yes a 2TB is coming up.

For RAID there are other LaCie solutions for it that are similar to NetworkSpace2. Plug 'n' play

April 12 2010 at 8:24 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Rick

I have a Netgear Stora which uses the same firmware as the lacie drives (hipserv) and DO NOT recommend them to anyone.

The software is buggy, and limited. For example, the Stora has a USB port on the front to expand storage to other USB-based drives. Its only compatible with approx 3 drives. I've tried my multiple WD MyBook's and they do not work.

I would seriously consider a drive not made by Lacie or Netgear as the firmware will cause you all kinds of problems.

April 12 2010 at 5:26 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Stefan

I have a 500GB version of this thing - presumably the LaCie Network Space 1. It is pretty much useless for anything other than a backup device. Data transfer back to the computer is painfully slow. There is no way to turn off the media server (which got picked up by my Kodak digital photo frame, and slowed that frame down tremendously). It appears to be active almost continuously, even when no other computer in the house is switched on (maybe it's talking to my JVC media player?). Oh, and did I mention it is slow?

If they have fixed the above in the second generation, it might be a good buy, but for the time being I'll pass and resort to USB harddisks.

April 12 2010 at 4:23 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
1 reply to Stefan's comment
minh.le-divers

this generation get ten time the speed of the version 1 which was horribly slow. DLNA feature can be turned on or off. and it advertise only the things in the public folder (Openshare).
Seems there have been progress made on the continuous thing=> now it is much more quiet, i have heard that before it was running all the time to build the DLNA table which seems to be a thing which has been solved

April 13 2010 at 5:42 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
georgemarinov

... except I've now disassembled enough of LaCie's products to know I can't trust any of them with my data. Especially NAS+RAID boxes, such as 2big.

unfortunately although written in good faith, this is a misleading article suggesting a device based on its features, but not taking the single most important factor into account - long term reliability.

April 12 2010 at 3:53 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
MadMike

I, also, concur with the plurality sentiment. LaCie drives suck.

Overpriced, Unreliable, Slow. More form than function.

The only positive, being Mac friendly. That's it.

April 12 2010 at 3:27 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Thomas B. Aschim

I just returned my newly purchased Network Space 2, as I found it to be quite unreliable, and with great limitations.

It's true that it's very much plug'n'play, and for a novice user this is probably an OK product. But for power users, the settings you get access to on this box is very basic and not impressive. In addition you have to split the built-in drive between the public share, private share and USB disk. We're talking about different partitions with no possibility of moving files between them except by copying them via your computer, which is unnecessarily slow. And no accessing the same data through different connections either.

My box also constantly malfunctioned, and had to be reset several times during the first days after purchase. The data is not lost, but is moved into the public share partition on firmware resetting. Moving hundreds of GB back to the private share (through my computer over the network) is just painful.

April 12 2010 at 3:11 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
1 reply to Thomas B. Aschim's comment
woody

LaCie drives, in general, suck.

April 12 2010 at 3:16 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
M. Kozaqii

I've got a desktop/USB version of one of those Poulton drives (with an Hitachi 1GB -- a good drive -- in the enclosure). Snazzy appearance, but it has some poor performance issues:

First, it's noisy as hell. I've used many external HDDs over the years and have another attached now (a LaCie Porsche with a Seagate 500MB inside). This thing is by far the loudest.

Also, it spins down after only a couple of minutes being idle too. That might be a good thing (power conservation/longevity) except for the fact that it takes several seconds to spin back up again.

In my case I have my music on the drive, so after pausing iTunes for a phone call, resuming takes a while and causes SBOD on iTunes until it's ready. Also, (on my system at least) all mounted drives need to be ready when you use open/save dialogs, so the slow time to spin back up is an issue there.

I can't say what these updated network models are like, but I can only recommend the one I've got for things like backup and archives. For "Real time/live" data use, go with something else.

April 12 2010 at 2:53 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
1 reply to M. Kozaqii's comment
Mike

Moe, look into a little program called HD Awake. Not the most elegant solution, but it keeps a drive like this running by writing a file to it every few seconds in the background. I use it when I'm running iTunes to combat the very problem you're talking about.

April 12 2010 at 10:22 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
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