![]() I seem to be at an impasse and would appreciate your guidance before attempting more onerous means of restoring access to my music. The problem with that is that the installation no longer appears in Minimwatch, so it isn’t possible to de-activate the license. You must deactivate your Minimserver license before uninstalling”. When trying to uninstall Minimserver, the message is “Failed to uninstall the package. As far as I can see, there are no Beta packages on the left and no means I can find of joining the Beta program, or of directly addressing the updated version of Minimserver. The installation then proceeded without problem, but in the package centre afterwards, Minimserver shows as stopped with a message that says “Please go to Beta packages on the left panel to repair the package by joining the beta program”. I was required by the upgrade to uninstall Java 8, which I did. You might have other problems if you first remove the old Minim package and then install the beta.Having read the content of this thread – evidently not carefully enough, I set about installing DSM7.0 on my Synology DS214+, which houses part of my music collection. If you need to upgrade Minim, make sure you install the beta package over the existing Minim installation. ![]() Minim no longer depends on the separate Java8 package (which has been deprecated) as it now includes an embedded Java runtime. Indeed, you may find you have issues updating both Asset and MinimServer after the DSM7 upgrade.įor Asset you’ll need to install the DSM7-specific package, while MinimServer currently has a beta package for DSM7 that you will need to install as noted above. If you are using your NAS primarily for audio serving then there is no big reason to upgrade, nor is there any reason to expect any audio improvement from upgrading. My main reasons for upgrading were to use the new Synology Photos package for automated phone photo backup, the improved Storage Manager, and performance improvements. My DS412+ missed the cut so is stuck at 6.2. I have two Synology NASes and I have upgraded my DS415+ that is supported by DSM7. If you’ve got a Synology NAB, I would recommend C2 as a cost effective off-site backup that doesn’t require a huge amount of tech savvy to set up. So thus far the C2 option is very easy for backup and restoration. The easy option of giving my telco another $15 a month (about 7 pounds) took me to 1Gb/s down, and about 400Mb’s up, fixing that particular problem. The only thing I had to change was my broadband plan a 100Mb’s download plan (which ran at about 25Mb/s up) would have taken around 11 days to run the first backup. This also means that if you want to go to an older version of a modified file you just go to the backup prior to the change you want to revert). Each backup set shows the total file store (so you don’t need to restore a series of backups). I’ve used HyperBackup (which as your would expect integrates natively with C2), running a nightly differential backup.Ĭ2 with HyperBackup works similar conceptually to TimeMachine. I’ve bought a subscription to Synology C2 (which is around US$70 per year per terabyte). I’ve got a 6 monthly repeating reminder in my calendar to take another backup to a USB drive, which I keep elsewhere in the house.īut being properly paranoid, I decided to give cloud backups a try. I run a Synology 218+, which I backup each night to an older 4 bay ReadyNAS that I keep down in the workshop. As an aside whilst we’re on the topic of Synology, talking with the insurance company a couple of weeks ago about my CD collection got me thinking that if I lost all the CDs (there’s about 2800 of them) I would be sad, but I would be devastated if I lost all of the rips of them I’ve got on the NAS.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |