Synology launched two new 2U RackStations (the RS2414+ amd RS2414RP+) today. These are the first units with a full 12 bays available in the main unit itself (Their current flagship, the RS10613xs+ has 10 bays and two additional bays for caching drives). Both models can scale up to 24 drives with the RX1214 and RX1214RP RackExpansion units.

Keeping affordability in mind (the RS2414+, RS2414RP+, RX1214 and RX1214RP have MSRPs of $1900, $2500, $1700 and $2400 respectively), the models don't come with Xeon-based platforms. They appear to have the same base hardware as the DS1813+ (with a 2.13 GHz Atom-class dual core CPU, four Gigabit NICs and 2 GB of RAM which is upgradeable to 4 GB). Enterprise features like high availability and MPIO are available. The software (DSM 4.3) carries all necessary certifications from the virtualization software vendors, ADS and LDAP support as well as SSD read caching and TRIM support.

Synology's decision to target the market for rackmount units with both Xeon and Atom-based models is interesting. Even though the Atom-based units are probably not powerful enough for models with a large number of bays, it should be good enough for applications where scalability and capacity are primary concerns, rather than raw performance.

Enterprise / SMB customers with an urgent need for scalable solutions would do little wrong in opting to go with the new models. For those who can wait a little, the Bay Trail-based solutions coming out next year are going to be a better choice in many respects (power consumption and encryption performance are just a few aspects in which we can expect considerable improvements).

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  • Nehemoth - Tuesday, October 8, 2013 - link

    And still, no way to block media files. These guys don't understand what enterprise means. I open up a case suggesting this feature and they even ask me why I would like that.

    Of course, even in our old EMC Celera I can block media files by extension, Windows server since 2003 have a great file screening with notify if someone try to write a forbidden data type. I hope in a near future they add this feature.
  • extide - Tuesday, October 8, 2013 - link

    Use it as an iSCSI target, format it as NTFS, share over SMB, using that file screening you already mentioned. Done.
  • Nehemoth - Thursday, October 24, 2013 - link

    Great option, sadly I need another windows license for this, but better than nothing.

    Thank you
  • Gigaplex - Tuesday, October 8, 2013 - link

    That doesn't stop users doing things like copying MyPr0n.avi.zip now does it? Or what if marketing guys need to create a video for advertising? You're going to block that too?
  • centosfan - Friday, November 29, 2013 - link

    This is insane they don't have Xeon or at least and i3 processor with ECC memory. An Atom chip is no where near fast enough. Without ECC memory this is not going to make it in the enterprise or even serious SMB market. Also having 10GBe-T option is a must for something this expensive.

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