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![]() The Acer Aspire EasyStore AH340 home server offers a compact footprint and stylish blue LED status lights (see a larger view of the features). |
Networking, Connectivity & Expansion
What's in the box
This package contains the Acer Aspire EasyStore home server (model AH340-UA230N), power cord, software DVD, user manual
The hot swappable HDD cage enables you to increase your data storage by adding up to three 3.5-inch internal hard drives, which means it offers up to about 8 TB of total data storage. The cage is outfitted with release levers for each drive to keep them secure. In addition, a recovery/reset pinhole provides additional data protection by enabling system restores and data recoveries with just one-touch.
![]() The Acer EasyStore includes three hot-swappable hard drive bays with simple, easy access to the drives (also see a view of the rear of the server). |
For example, parents can access their children's homework while traveling for business. They can also upload videos and photos from sports events or summer vacations to the server, even while away from home. At any time, from anywhere, every family member with a PC in the home network can access photos, videos, music and other documents from the home server.
This centralization of digital data saves significant time by eliminating the need to transfer data from one PC to another, every time someone wants a photo, video or other document that's stored on another PC. It's also a safeguard. If a netbook or notebook is damaged, lost or stolen, users don't lose their data along with it, since it's backed up at home. In addition, when a new system is added to the network, it's quick and easy to upload data from the computer to the server.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
59 of 62 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Very compelling solution for backups, restores, media server, and remote access to data,
This review is from: Acer Aspire easyStore AH340-U2T1H Home Server (Personal Computers)
QUICK SUMMARY: Acer's AH340 server, when configured correctly, provides home users and small offices a powerful solution for automated backups, restores, remote access and media server capability. However, configuring this server can be challenging, and Acer makes little effort to help its customers. Microsoft's Windows Home Server is a terrific -- and stable! -- operating system. Add a 2nd hard drive, too, and you've got redundant data storage. Cautiously recommended.
*** SPECIAL NOTE as of December 31, 2010: If you're in the market for a Windows Home Server, you should know about a few announcements that occurred in November, 2010. One, Hewlett-Packard is getting out of the Windows Home Server market. They won't be making HP Mediasmart home servers any more. HP sold the most number of Windows Home Servers, and people are speculating whether this move will effectively kill the Windows Home Server market. Two, Microsoft announced that they are removing Drive Extender from the next version of Windows Home Server (Version 2, code named Vail, which will be released in 2011; Drive Extender technology is included with WHS Version 1, which runs these Acer servers). Drive Extender is a critical piece of technology that allows you to easily add more hard drives to your server, have a single pool of storage for all your data, and it provides for data redundancy (so if one hard drive crashes, your data is kept on a 2nd hard drive, provided you've added at least one more hard drive to your server). Microsoft will provide full support to this version of WHS until January, 2013, and then it will not be supported any longer - no bug fixes or security enhancements. *** SPECIAL NOTE as of February 6, 2010: McAfee Antivirus automatically updated their software to Version 5, which totally screwed up my server! STAY AWAY from McAfee!! If you buy this server, immediately use Remote Desktop to open the server's Control Panel, choose Add or Remove Programs, and uninstall McAfee from your server! McAfee cannot be trusted! Read the end of this review to learn more. What follows is my review of the Acer Aspire AH340-UA230N Home Server, based upon my personal experience with it since purchasing one in late June 2009. For 2010, Acer has refreshed their Windows Home Server lineup using faster RAM and the Intel Atom D410 and D510 CPUs which have a slight bump in processor speed and, for the D510, more L2 cache. Other than this, the AH341 and AH342 servers are *exactly* the same as the older AH340 server. ****** ACER HOME SERVER PRODUCT CONFIGURATION CHART ****** Acer Aspire easyStore AH340-U2T1H Windows® Home Server, Intel® Atom(tm) Processor 230 (512KB L2 cache, 1.60GHz, 533MHz FSB), 2GB (2/0) DDR2 667 SDRAM, 256MB flash ROM, 2TB SATA hard drive, Intel® Graphics Media Accelerator 950, gigabit LAN Acer Aspire AH340-UA230N Windows® Home Server, Intel® Atom(tm) Processor 230 (512KB L2 cache, 1.60GHz, 533MHz FSB), 2GB (2/0) DDR2 667 SDRAM, 256MB flash ROM, 1TB SATA hard drive, Intel® Graphics Media Accelerator 950, gigabit LAN Acer Aspire easyStore AH341-U1T2H Windows® Home Server, Intel® Atom(tm) Processor D410 (512KB L2 cache, 1.66GHz), 2GB (2) DDR2 800 SDRAM, 256MB flash ROM, 1TB SATA hard drive, gigabit LAN Acer Aspire easyStore AH342-U2T2H Home Server (Black), Intel® Atom(tm) Processor D510 (1MB L2 cache, 1.66GHz), 2GB (2) DDR2 800 SDRAM, 256MB flash ROM, 2TB SATA hard drive, gigabit LAN ********************************************************* If you read this very long review, you'll learn quite a bit about this Acer server and the Windows Home Server operating system. You'll also read about some minor issues I've run into, and how to workaround those issues. I've owned this server for six months now, and it's been a good experience overall. If you buy this Acer server, you're not going to get much help from Acer. So for any problems, your own technical know-how and the Internet community are your best sources of help. In short, I bought this Acer server and successfully installed it on my home network. In very large part, it's doing what it's supposed to be doing, that is, it automatically backs up my four-computer home network, and it gives me remote access to my data, too. Thus far, I have only one small, re-occurring issue which I'll share in a moment. The out-of-box experience is pretty good, but don't expect much by way of documentation. You'll need to look elsewhere to understand all the ins-and-outs of using Windows Home Server (WHS). Although the "Quick Start" booklet seems very thick, it's actually got the instructions in about five or six languages, and so when you read the English section (if you read English), you'll only see how to set-up the server with a little narrative and black-and-white screenshots that are difficult to read. Fortunately, the setup is pretty easy, and they do include a larger poster with just the absolute essentials (which is what I used), and the poster was good enough. In short, plug-in the ethernet cable from the server to your wireless router, and you're in business. The server is heavier than I expected, and *quieter* than I expected (much less noisy than my desktop computer). Then, you install a CD in one of your available networked computers to install the Server Console on the installed-from computer, and to begin configuring your new server. One things stands out in my mind here...the instructions say turn-on your server and wait until the blue LED light is glowing steady. Trouble is, there are about seven or eight lights glowing at this point (one light for each of the four disk drive bays, a power-on light, a network light, an "information" light, and possibly a disk activity light), and some of the lights glow purple, not blue. Suffice it to say that you should wait a few minutes just to make sure everything is settled before you start server configuring. The server configuration went pretty well, I thought. Do a Google search for "Acer Windows Home Server Review" and you'll find a website where someone has very helpfully documented the entire install process using color screenshots of each step. The installed server console program (running on one of your networked computers) is not resizeable and won't maximize, which is annoying. You can use Remote Desktop Connection to actually login to your new server (if you're not familiar with Remote Desktop Connection, it lets you connect to another computer from the computer you're using). In a very short time, my old, quirky Gateway desktop computer (circa 2003, XP Pro, 2Ghz CPU, 512MB RAM, 80GB HD) was recognized by the new Acer server, and I was creating user accounts on the server that match my desktop computer (you should use a password on your user accounts, and be sure to specify the same password on the server as what you use for the desktop/laptop account). At this point, I had my first problem -- the Gateway's connection to the server would get lost inexplicably during the first attempt at a manual backup. Long story short, I completely reinstalled Windows XP Pro SP-3 on the Gateway desktop, reinstalled the Windows Home Server Console, and was able to begin getting successful backups until I got to the point where I restored all my digital media files (using Acronis and an external hard drive -- not using the new Acer server) and then tried a WHS backup, which fails inexplicably. Could be my aging and quirky Gateway hardware, but it's a fresh install of XP and the error messaging is vague and unhelpful. Notably, my three laptops (running XP Media Edition w/1GB RAM, Vista Ultimate w/2GB, and Windows 7 Ultimate w/4GB of RAM) backed up their contents perfectly -- no troubles at all, even backing up a very large VMWare virtual hard drive (which is a single, physical, 20GB file on my Vista laptop). Very cool feature: This Acer will wake-up either a sleeping or hibernating computer to do the backup in the middle of the night! So, don't turn-off your computers, just put them in sleep/hibernate mode so they don't use much power, but will still get backed-up. (Note: WHS does *not* use Wake On LAN technology, which doesn't work reliably in all environments - the WHS technical strategy for waking sleeping/hibernating computers works much better than WOL). The WHS backups are incremental, so you can return to any previous point in time during a restore -- you aren't limited just to what was done last night. This is handy if you want to restore your computer to the way it worked one month ago, when it was working reliably (you'd probably do a 2nd restore, then, to load all your most recent data following the system restore). To get remote access to work correctly, you need to modify your ISP's modem setups (your ISP's modem most likely has a built-in router, too). Choose "Bridged over Ethernet" protocol in the modem setups, and then configure your wireless router that's attached to the modem so it is a PPPoE connection (you'll need your ISP's account name and password for the router configuration). Once I got through this headache, I was able to gain remote access to my server -- very cool feature!! (BTW, don't count on any technical help by AT&T/Bellsouth - you won't get any that's helpful to you). You may also have trouble if your ISP blocks certain ports, like ports 80 and 443. One Amazon customer reported that Verizon blocks those two ports which are necessary to get remote access to your... Read more ›
11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Very useful, but with some caveats,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Acer Aspire easyStore AH340-U2T1H Home Server (Personal Computers)
[update at end of review]
I work at home and have several computers on an internal network, all of which need backing up on a regular basis. I purchased this server in hopes of it providing a solution. It now does, but only after a few bumps along the way. I can recommend this server conditionally, with the cautions described below. Since the computers that need to be backed up all have large hard drives themselves (600 GB to 1 TB), I purchased three additional 2 TB SATA hard drives (Western Digital 2 TB Caviar Green SATA Intellipower 64 MB Cache Bulk/OEM Desktop Hard Drive WD20EARS) and installed them. I soon started having heat problems with the server (68 to 70 degrees C). I solved them with a small $15 fan from Walmart, which simply blows constantly on the 'mesh' side of the server. But a server designed to hold four SATA drives shouldn't overheat when you put four drives in it; this is the principal factor behind the 3-star rating. I had some software/network configuration problems with the server and was unclear how to solve them. I then bought Microsoft Windows Home Server Unleashed (2nd Edition), which I strongly recommend; Chapter 1 alone was worth the price of the book. I restored the server itself via its accompanying CD, followed a few of the suggestions in McFedries' book, and things have worked mostly smoothly since then (as smoothly as anything involving Microsoft networking can run). I do have occasional problems; for example, there are times when I'll be able to log into the server via one of my systems using Remote Desktop Connection, yet if I try to log into the server from the same computer using the Windows Home Server Console, I get an error message. But it's unclear what's to blame for that, so I'll just leave it as a caveat. One last recommendation: when installing the client software on my systems, I ran into problems where it either couldn't find the server on the network, or -- having found it -- failed while trying to download the client software from the server. Turns out the problem was my firewall/antivirus software; once I turned it off, downloading the client software went just fine (and, of course, I turned the FW/AV software back on afterward). The initial backup of five systems took the better part of a day, but now the server does incremental backups each night, which is a tremendous load off my mind. My systems are all either Win7 or WinXP; however, my wife has a Macbook and a MacPro, both on the network as well, and she can 'see' the server. Besides the backups, I plan to use the server as a central repository for photos, music, etc., and will probably see how usable it is as a central iTunes server. I may update this review based on how those efforts go. All in all, a very useful device. For a bit over $800, I have a central server with automated backup of all my system and nearly 8 TB of storage. I'd be happier if it had 4 GB of RAM instead of just 2 GB, but since it runs very little software beyond Windows Home Server itself, I'm not sure it really needs much more. Your mileage may vary. ..bruce.. UPDATE: 08/28/2010. After getting the temperature problem handled, I kept having problems with network stability with the cube -- some systems would talk with it, others wouldn't; reboots would help, but the problems would arise again and were slowly getting worse. Then I got a persistent warning that the McAfee security software had failed to complete an update; I tried to complete it, but couldn't get it to run to completion. Googling the matter, I quickly found that lots of people had lots of problems with the McAfee software on this server, and that most of these same people said the problem went away when they uninstalled the McAfee software from the server. They also warned not to use the Windows Control Panel to uninstall it, but to download a special uninstall utility from the McAfee security website. I did so and, presto!, all my network problems surrounding the server went away. It has run perfectly ever since then, dutifully backing up all my systems every night without a single network glitch. YMMV. ..bruce..
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Acer h340-U2T1H,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Acer Aspire easyStore AH340-U2T1H Home Server (Personal Computers)
Guys i am not one to post reviews, this is my very 1st time, however on this unit i had to. the unit is excellent, i have it up and running now for a month, with not one single problem. the only thing that i would would like to pass on to prospective buyers that i could not find clearly stated in any manual on the the web site is this. if you have multiple computers etc. on your network and have assigned static ip to all units you must, change your router to DHCP, AND ALSO ONE COMPUTEPER, then the unit will be found on your network, after you have done this and install the software, you will be able to go back and change your router back to static ip, and also the one computer that you changed over, you will only at this phase, be able to assign a static ip to the acers, this process caused me to make several phone calls, and none one on the other side could help. then then sent me to a department that i had to pay $69.0 for 30 minutes for help. and they could not help me. therefore do not pay this money, just change the router to DHCP. if your network is already set to DHCP then you will not have any problems setting this unit up. and you will love the benefits that this unit have to offer. by the way this is he only reason, tech support, why i will not give this unit a 5 start
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