It's been a long journey, but this ewok is moving to another tribe. I joined the 'Jedi Council' here officially in 2007. But what many don't know is, that I've been a part of the ReadyNAS community since the birth of these forums. I started out as a customer myself back in 2004. At the time, I was working at a distributor in Canada, and one day this shiny black metal box showed up on my desk for review, the ReadyNAS 600. A small start-up sent it to us for consideration in distribution. I fell in love with the thing, buying that pre-production unit for my own personal use, before it was shipping to the general public.
Back then, it didn't even come with RAM, I had to populate that myself. They recommended a 128MB module, but I picked up a 256MB DDR stick to put in it, might as well pimp it out... I also bought the recently released (at the time) Maxtor 300GB Raid Edition drives. Overall, it was a costly setup back then, costing around $1800 in total I believe, but man was it awesome. Wasn't long before I was poking around in the back end where I shouldn't have been. SSH was running, but only set for access by the Jedi, but that didn't stop me
I loved getting more out of devices then they were originally intended for. When I saw there was a PCI slot in the ReadyNAS 600, I had a light bulb moment.. I had a bunch of ASUS USB2 4-port PCI cards. I popped one in, but it didn't get detected. A few posts on the forum later, and Skywalker added support for it in all its glory! Amazing, I was able to connect three USB HDD enclosures to the system, while still having the on-board ports free for a printer and UPS, all without using a USB HUB. I was giddy.
At one point in 2005, my NAS became ill. Something happened to the RAID, I could not access my data, the horror! Working with Skywalker and Yoh-dah via many private messages, I ended up shipping my system to Infrant for diagnostics. I was their first 'data recovery' system, we entered a new era. After some trial and error, Skywalker was able to recover my system, yay! I thought 900GB (4x300GB RAID-5) was a lot of data, but these days we sometimes have to deal with 12x3TB when people let two or more disks fail, oh the fun times.
Back then, I was one of the top posters on the forums here. You could say I was the mdgm of the era, but long since overpassed by that crazy guy
And now, five fun filled years later, I am moving on. It is sad, I will miss my friends here at NETGEAR (and all the employee perk hardware
Update [02/26/13]: I still frequent these forums, in attempts to keep the community alive and help out users with issues. If you browse around here yourself, you will see quite clearly that NETGEAR has given up on this once great community. I used to be proud of this site. The 'jedi' don't visit anymore, management won't take a tiny effort to communicate with members. I have since recommended friends looking for a home NAS to go towards Synology. For my own home use, I built a home brew box running ZFS to replace my dusty ReadyNAS. What I also left out of this post originally was why I left... I don't agree with the direction NETGEAR is headed, and others that left in the same timeframe as me feel the same. Good day!
Update [03/17/13]: And the death of the community makes some progress... I've now been banned from the NTGR forums by Brett Hesterberg (Product Line Manager, Storage), for helping ReadyDATA users when NTGR has completely ignored them. If you don't like truthful answers given to people, start posting yourself more often please. You'll notice two NTGR employees each made one post in that thread, otherwise they have been ghosts the whole time on those forums; compared to me, who has been the only technical helper to all the other posts on that sub-forum. All you've done by banning me, is show NTGR's true direction in killing off the community. And on the thread in question I was banned for, all I did was link to the public anonymous FTP that NETGEAR runs. If you don't want users to test out beta releases (between very long release cycles with long outstanding bugs), don't share them publicly, duh.
Update [04/19/13]: More censorship is occurring now also, silent thread deletions. NTGR hasn't made public comments yet on their intentions of this site going forward.
