Balling
Premium Member
Registered: 7th Apr 04
Location: Denmark
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What's the way to go? Rip CD's and put on NAS?
If so, which NAS? Needs to be plug and play.
What's the other solutions?
It's for my parents. I recommended just throwing the CD's in storage and signing up for Spotify, but it's not an option, apparently.
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Dom
Member
Registered: 13th Sep 03
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NAS is the easiest option and rip the collection to FLAC. Look at Synology or QNap as both are pretty easy to setup and it might be worth employing a raid array (mirroring/raid 1 etc) as a fail safe in the event of hard drive failure.
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VegasPhil
Premium Member
Registered: 16th Jan 05
Location: Fareham, Hants Drives: Octavia VRS
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CDs? What do they want those horrible things hanging around the house for. They have to store them on shelves and everything.....
Deezer or Spotify required! If they don't want that then Sonos probably isn't for them
Corsa 2.0 16v Vegas - Sold
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Balling
Premium Member
Registered: 7th Apr 04
Location: Denmark
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by VegasPhil
CDs? What do they want those horrible things hanging around the house for.
They don't. Hence the need for a NAS or other storage solution.
Dom, what you're suggesting doesn't sound very plug and play.
Obviously ripping the CD's aren't an issue. Any Mac software that does it better/faster than iTunes?
Could you recommend a specific model? There seems to be quite a few options.
Anything wrong with going with an out of the box solution like Western Digital?
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Dom
Member
Registered: 13th Sep 03
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by Balling
Dom, what you're suggesting doesn't sound very plug and play.
Tbh, i'm sure what's so difficult about using a NAS - purchase a NAS (+ hard drives if you went barebones); attached it to your network and set it up, QNap/Synology have pretty simple wizards that'll guide you through it all; create a network share (call it 'Music' etc) and add it to your PC/MAC (mac - cmd + k, type in the NAS IP address eg - smb://192.168.0.10 etc); rip your CD's to the network share using something like >Max<; then point your Sonos to your NAS.
Reason i mentioned Synology and QNap NAS devices is because they have very simple interfaces, Synology more so as it's all big icons and colourful
I'm sure a WD, Buffalo etc would be fine but i've never really had much experience of them. Although personally i'd stay away from Drobo as they use (or certainly did use at one point) their own filesystem, which'd make it a pain in the event the hardware failed and you needing access to the data.
As for models, something like a Synology DS214se/DS215j would suffice - i'd opt for the 215j personally; roughly £20 difference and it's dual core and twice the ram, which'll make it a better experience.
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