User Manual Network Direct Attached Storage / NDAS® 2.2 USB Mode Note: NDAS Utility software does not need to be installed to use in USB mode. If your NDAS device has dip switches on the rear panel, fip both dip switches up. Connect the included USB cable from the USB port on the NDAS device to your computer’s USB port. Sep 21, 2003 - The FAQ on Ximeta's website says they'll release 'beta software for Windows. I connected the NetDisk to my LAN's switch and selected the NDAS. Acer Swift 5 Hands-on: 'World's Lightest' 15-inch Laptop Makes Me Giddy. Page 1 HANTZ + PARTNER The Upgrade Company! Www.hantz.com For Windows 2000 / XP Software Version 2.3 NetDisk & NetDisk ™ Mini™ Powered by Technology www.ximeta.de.; Page 2 Warranty Statement XIMETA, Inc. Reserves the right to revise this publication and to make changes to the content hereof without the obligation of XIMETA, Inc. To notify any person of such revision or changes. Here's a brief history of my NDAS experience: I have three NDAS hard drives since many years, one 320Gb single and two 1Tb Raid1. They were running well on XP. Then came Windows 7 and I got problems with crashing at boot during many months with the 3.72.2080 on my Dell Vostro 3750 I7 laptop. Free Download NetDisk is the world's first consumer-friendly, external Ethernet/USB 2.0 combo hard drive embedded with XIMETA's revolutionary NDAS technology, which allows direct connection to any.
2006-10-13, 10:54
![World Ndas Software Ximeta World Ndas Software Ximeta](https://www.ixbt.com/storage/ext-hdd2005/coworld/cw-plata-big.jpg)
Hi,
I have a couple of questions that I hope someone here could help me out with:
1) I assume that xbox/xbmc does not have support for XIMETA's NetDisk (NDAS) protocol?
2) Does anyone know if someone out there is trying to add NDAS support for the XBOX. Is this possible to do at all?
3) Is it possible to write custom device drivers for the xbox as things stand at the moment? If so does someone know how one would go about doing this, i.e. where can one get the DDK etc.
Regards,
Viktor Godaly
I have a couple of questions that I hope someone here could help me out with:
1) I assume that xbox/xbmc does not have support for XIMETA's NetDisk (NDAS) protocol?
2) Does anyone know if someone out there is trying to add NDAS support for the XBOX. Is this possible to do at all?
3) Is it possible to write custom device drivers for the xbox as things stand at the moment? If so does someone know how one would go about doing this, i.e. where can one get the DDK etc.
Regards,
Viktor Godaly
2007-12-28, 21:05
Hi,
Ximeta has external hard drive cases with NDAS support. NDAS is different than NAS, each client needs to run a driver kind of software to access the NDAS storage disk. Ximeta engineers have posted the driver source code for linux.
Can this source code be ported to XBMC to support accessing Ximeta NDAS disks? This may be a great addition to networking capabilities of XBMC.
Thanks.
Ximeta has external hard drive cases with NDAS support. NDAS is different than NAS, each client needs to run a driver kind of software to access the NDAS storage disk. Ximeta engineers have posted the driver source code for linux.
Can this source code be ported to XBMC to support accessing Ximeta NDAS disks? This may be a great addition to networking capabilities of XBMC.
Thanks.
Ximeta Netdisk Driver Windows 10
2007-12-28, 21:39
seems like a stupid design, is it USB or Ethernet ?
And why don't you even include a link where I could findout about this myself ?
And why don't you even include a link where I could findout about this myself ?
Always read the XBMC online-manual, FAQ and search the forum before posting.
Do not e-mail XBMC-Team members directly asking for support. Read/follow the forum rules.
For troubleshooting and bug reporting please make sure you read this first.
Do not e-mail XBMC-Team members directly asking for support. Read/follow the forum rules.
For troubleshooting and bug reporting please make sure you read this first.
2007-12-28, 21:52
It has both USB and ethernet interfaces. Only one can be used at a time. They claim their transfer speeds are much faster than NAS. The drive is not assigned an IP address unlike NAS drives. There is a unique key per Ximeta enclosure and each client PC configures the key in the Ximeta driver to access the drive.
The link to the product is:
http://www.ximeta.com/web/products/ndenclosure1_en.php
The link for the source code on linux to access Ximeta NDAS devices is:
http://code.ximeta.com/trac-ndas/wiki/Download
The link to the product is:
http://www.ximeta.com/web/products/ndenclosure1_en.php
The link for the source code on linux to access Ximeta NDAS devices is:
http://code.ximeta.com/trac-ndas/wiki/Download
2007-12-28, 22:05
Ndas Software Vista
Don't hold your breath, we are not big fans of proprietary protocols.
..why XIMETA just don't just support SMB as well is beyond me
http://sourceforge.net/tracker/index.php..tid=581841
..why XIMETA just don't just support SMB as well is beyond me
http://sourceforge.net/tracker/index.php..tid=581841
Ximeta Ndas Software Windows 10
Always read the XBMC online-manual, FAQ and search the forum before posting.
Do not e-mail XBMC-Team members directly asking for support. Read/follow the forum rules.
For troubleshooting and bug reporting please make sure you read this first.
Do not e-mail XBMC-Team members directly asking for support. Read/follow the forum rules.
For troubleshooting and bug reporting please make sure you read this first.
2007-12-29, 16:18
I'm a major adversary to proprietary protocols as well; however..
In this case, it's a justified feature and the company has done a great job signing up partners, and delivering ubiquitous code.
You’re probably familiar with the inherent shortcomings of NAS and the overhead of IP file sharing. You have a few options, iSCSI being one. This is the poor-man’s iSCSI, and the beauty of it – it could be argued that it’s more secure than IP file sharing, it’s MUCH faster, it’s easier and has less overhead, and relevant to our discussion here: it’s got an amazing DVD/CD virtualization technology for media jukeboxes, which is absolutely huge.
I feel that before it’s dismissed, it would be worth reconsidering – or at least keeping it on a list for consideration/research, particularly since the source is available.
In this case, it's a justified feature and the company has done a great job signing up partners, and delivering ubiquitous code.
You’re probably familiar with the inherent shortcomings of NAS and the overhead of IP file sharing. You have a few options, iSCSI being one. This is the poor-man’s iSCSI, and the beauty of it – it could be argued that it’s more secure than IP file sharing, it’s MUCH faster, it’s easier and has less overhead, and relevant to our discussion here: it’s got an amazing DVD/CD virtualization technology for media jukeboxes, which is absolutely huge.
I feel that before it’s dismissed, it would be worth reconsidering – or at least keeping it on a list for consideration/research, particularly since the source is available.
2008-01-02, 00:28
Ndas Device Management
virtualization is irrelevant to XBMC, which can already use disc image files without issue.
2008-05-13, 21:39
I have an NDAS drive and I think it would be great if it were supported in XBMC.
2008-10-02, 23:14
hello xbmc forum,
Thanks to XBMC team for great job and for support time in this forum.
I've been using xbmc for many years and it is great.
Back to NDAS :
It is true, available NDAS hard drives are much faster than nas drives.
If you are using XBMC on a linux platform, xbmc as application doesn't need support NDAS.
You have only to install the driver on your system and register ndas device with id and key (you find them on your ndas drive) and enable it.
The device apears as block device like the internal hard drive(as virtual device).
Now XBMC can access to new ndas device like to normal internal hard drive.
Find more in a current README in this tarball
http://code.ximeta.com/dev/1.1/24/linux/
I'm not use such devices because of this unsupported feature:
- Hibernation, standby are not supported
NDAS:
http://www.ximeta.com/web/technology/nda..ie1_en.php
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_Dir..ed_Storage
I hope this post helps to NDAS users.
Thanks to XBMC team for great job and for support time in this forum.
I've been using xbmc for many years and it is great.
Back to NDAS :
It is true, available NDAS hard drives are much faster than nas drives.
If you are using XBMC on a linux platform, xbmc as application doesn't need support NDAS.
You have only to install the driver on your system and register ndas device with id and key (you find them on your ndas drive) and enable it.
The device apears as block device like the internal hard drive(as virtual device).
Now XBMC can access to new ndas device like to normal internal hard drive.
Find more in a current README in this tarball
http://code.ximeta.com/dev/1.1/24/linux/
I'm not use such devices because of this unsupported feature:
- Hibernation, standby are not supported
NDAS:
http://www.ximeta.com/web/technology/nda..ie1_en.php
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_Dir..ed_Storage
I hope this post helps to NDAS users.
2010-06-20, 17:02
Hi,
I'm using NDAS 3.72.280.1456 SVN along with windows 7, and I'm not able to connect to the remote device, which is shown as offline always.
The device is a IAMM NTD-38N below a link to it:
http://www.o2media.es/iamm_ntd-38n
The connection is thru wireless. Using a router comtrend CT-5365
Form the device (NTD-38N) point of view, it's connected to the wireless, but when I install the NDAS and registered the device, then after is always shown as offline.
I have deleted the device from NDAS, couple of times and registered again but it doesn't work.
What can I do?
Many thanks for your advises.
Kind rgds
I'm using NDAS 3.72.280.1456 SVN along with windows 7, and I'm not able to connect to the remote device, which is shown as offline always.
The device is a IAMM NTD-38N below a link to it:
http://www.o2media.es/iamm_ntd-38n
The connection is thru wireless. Using a router comtrend CT-5365
Form the device (NTD-38N) point of view, it's connected to the wireless, but when I install the NDAS and registered the device, then after is always shown as offline.
I have deleted the device from NDAS, couple of times and registered again but it doesn't work.
What can I do?
Many thanks for your advises.
Kind rgds
2010-06-20, 17:35
So what if it's fast? Any regular NAS with SMB is more than fast enough to serve up HD streams.
Why doesn't NDAS just add SMB support?
Why doesn't NDAS just add SMB support?
2011-01-23, 21:40
I have used the NDAS utility to mount with read write with my Mac, but I try to write to the Netdisk and it doesn't work. when I look at permissions in the utility it is fine but the netdisk shows read only. frustrating.. what's going on?
I am in a mixed environment but only my Mac is mounted with write at this point.
I am in a mixed environment but only my Mac is mounted with write at this point.
2013-03-11, 19:36
I have a XIMETA Netdisk NDAS that I bought a few years ago and worked Ok with Windows Server 2003. I just tried to use it with Windows 7 64 bit and it indicates Offline when on network but Online if USB. I hate proprietary network protocols that are unresponsive to standard utilities.
Networked Attached Storage that is not NAS
One of the many buzzwords floating around in tech circles is NAS, an acronym for Networked Attached Storage. Traditionally, data storage was handled by hard disks attached to large (and expensive) servers. Take those drives out of the box and plug them into your network and you can remove bottlenecks inherent in the server hardware and software. Additionally, access to data will not be dependent upon server uptime. On the surface, this seems a simple enough concept: connect a storage device directly to a network. However, enterprise-level businesses that live and die on the availability of their data need things like fault tolerance, redundancy, and failover. Thus, over the last few years a number of companies have developed, built, and marketed these high-end NAS devices. Network Appliance, HP (n?e Compaq), IBM, and EMC, and others all do very brisk business.
Product: Ximeta NetDisk NDU-160 (Product
Page)
Manufacturer's website: Ximeta
MSRP: US$249
Street price:
US$249
Page)
Manufacturer's website: Ximeta
MSRP: US$249
Street price:
US$249
All high-end technologies eventually filter down to the consumer level, and
NAS is no exception. In
order to hit these lower price points, some features need to be stripped out
while core functionality is maintained. The same is true for NAS. A number of
companies including Maxtor,
Linksys,
LaCie, Dlink,
and Ximeta are now selling external hard drives that
include an RJ45
port and are meant to be plugged directly into your home or small business
network. The pricing among these vendors varies somewhat but approximately US$600
seems to be the sweet spot for 120-160 GB of capacity. The Ximeta Netdisk is
significantly less expensive at US$250. Although it works as stated, there are a
few rough edges leftover that may help explain the lower price.
NAS is no exception. In
order to hit these lower price points, some features need to be stripped out
while core functionality is maintained. The same is true for NAS. A number of
companies including Maxtor,
Linksys,
LaCie, Dlink,
and Ximeta are now selling external hard drives that
include an RJ45
port and are meant to be plugged directly into your home or small business
network. The pricing among these vendors varies somewhat but approximately US$600
seems to be the sweet spot for 120-160 GB of capacity. The Ximeta Netdisk is
significantly less expensive at US$250. Although it works as stated, there are a
few rough edges leftover that may help explain the lower price.
![World Ndas Software Ximeta World Ndas Software Ximeta](https://usermanual.wiki/img.php?id=409805&img=bg3.png)
Ximeta does not market the NetDisk as NAS. They call their method NDAS,
Network Direct Attached Storage. To me this sounds like an amalgam of NAS and
DASD (Direct Access Storage Device) from mainframe days. This may be an accurate
assessment as it seems their protocol may be encapsulating SCSI frames in
Ethernet packets (perhaps similar to iSCSI). According to Ximeta:
Network Direct Attached Storage. To me this sounds like an amalgam of NAS and
DASD (Direct Access Storage Device) from mainframe days. This may be an accurate
assessment as it seems their protocol may be encapsulating SCSI frames in
Ethernet packets (perhaps similar to iSCSI). According to Ximeta:
NDAS
allows direct connection to your network without a server, IP address, or a
Sprint layout full crack. protocol.
allows direct connection to your network without a server, IP address, or a
Sprint layout full crack. protocol.
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Ndas Software
This is where the NetDisk diverges from the products of the
above-mentioned vendors. They all support standard network protocols and should
work with any OS. The Netdisk does not and requires a driver that needs to be
installed on each PC that will access it.
above-mentioned vendors. They all support standard network protocols and should
work with any OS. The Netdisk does not and requires a driver that needs to be
installed on each PC that will access it.
Illustration from NetDisk user manual