Synology Solution Exhibition 2025 – What We Saw, What We Learned

The Synology Solution 2025/2026 Event – What Was There?

At Synology’s UK Solutions Exhibition 2025, the company marked its 25th anniversary with a detailed look at how it intends to position itself for the next phase of enterprise and private-cloud data management. The event covered a wide spectrum of topics, ranging from backup and storage architecture to surveillance, productivity platforms, and AI governance, with several new products and services scheduled for release in late 2025 and early 2026. Alongside technical presentations and case studies, Synology also addressed contentious issues such as its ongoing hard drive support policy and the balance between on-premises control and cloud services. This article brings together the key takeaways, product roadmaps, and policy updates from the event, supplemented with insights gathered through direct conversations with Synology staff across multiple sessions.

The TL;DR – Here is what’s NEW/Coming Soon

  • Synology DVA7400 12 Bay Rackmount (GFX Card, etc)
  • Synology DVA3000 4-Bay (seemed like somewhere between the DVA3221 and DVA1622
  • Semantic Video Search in Surveillance Station
  • Dynamic Mosaic and Smoke Detection in Surveillance Station
  • Updates on info for the PAS and GS Systems (eg Cluster Manager)
  • More info and lite usage demo of the managed switches
  • Same cameras shown from Computex event, but also a “Synology SD Card” (?!?)that is managed in Surveillance Station
  • Active Protect tweaks and improved comms with ABB
  • Synology Chat Plus and Meets (Video Conferencing software)
  • Synology NAS with GFX/GPU Card that can host local LLM
  • Synology Tiering

Before We Go Any Further – We STILL Have to Discuss Synology Hard Drive Compatibility!

Synology’s hard drive support policy was a recurring topic throughout the event and in direct conversations with staff. The subject was formally addressed in the opening session, where the company framed its approach as a strategic decision to validate and support selected drives for reliability and lifecycle assurance. In a later Q&A with a large Synology customer, the policy came up again, though the exchange felt somewhat staged. Away from the stage, I spoke with almost a dozen Synology team members on and off the record. The consistent message was that verification of Seagate and Western Digital drives is still in progress, but I also received conflicting off-the-record remarks about how validation and support could be expanded in the future. A follow-up article and video from me on this subject will be published soon to explore the matter further.

“As workloads scale and data becomes even more critical. We’ve made the strategic decision to fully validate and support scenario drives in our solution.
This means that we take an end to end responsibility for performance, reliability and long-term availability by managing both hardware and the software stack.
We intend to show you that we can deliver deeper integration, such as real-time health monitoring, predictive risk analysis and seamless firmware updates, all designed to reduce risk and maximise uptime.

This change is not about limiting choice, it’s about accountability. When you deploy a Synology solution, you can be confident that we stand behind every component and that you’ll receive a system optimised for performance and reliability over its entire lifestyle. And for our partners, this also means fewer unknowns of deployment and support, greater predictability and stronger value for your customers. Together, we can focus less on troubleshooting and more on helping businesses innovate, securely.”

The official position is that tighter control of hardware compatibility will improve integration features like predictive monitoring and firmware management, while reducing deployment risks. However, Synology repeatedly stressed that the policy is not yet final, with feedback from customers and partners still under review. From my discussions, the messaging suggests that although Synology’s stance is rooted in system accountability, the practical implications for users—particularly regarding Seagate and WD models such as IronWolf and Red or surveillance-focused drives like SkyHawk and Purple—remain unsettled. The lack of clarity points to an ongoing process where official announcements may evolve, but for now customers are being told the policy is about creating a more reliable platform rather than restricting options.

Introduction to Synology – 25 Years On

The opening session of Synology’s UK Solutions Exhibition marked the company’s 25th anniversary with a review of its history, current reach, and overall strategy. Synology reported that it has 14 million installations worldwide, is protecting around 25 million entities and servers, and manages more than 2 million accounts. Case examples were used to illustrate different applications, including the Imperial War Museum’s video archive workflows, Toyota’s use of scalable backup and disaster recovery, and surveillance and crowd management deployments using Synology cameras and DVA units. The presentation also provided background on the company’s origins in 2000 and the development of DSM as its Linux-based operating system. DSM was described as having grown from a small-business storage platform into a wider environment that spans file management, surveillance, backup, cloud services, and productivity, positioned between consumer-focused devices and enterprise systems.

The session also focused on the conditions in which these systems now operate. Trends highlighted included increasing architectural complexity from hybrid and cloud deployments, stricter compliance and regulatory requirements, persistent security threats, and ongoing budget constraints. Synology framed its approach around four design principles: integrating hardware and software into a single platform, embedding security features from the outset, simplifying management to reduce reliance on specialist expertise, and ensuring predictable long-term costs rather than shifting expenses over time. A notable point was the company’s drive compatibility and accountability policy. Synology stated that it will validate and support specific hard drives and SSDs to provide real-time monitoring, firmware updates, and lifecycle assurances. However, the company also acknowledged that it is still assessing customer and partner feedback on the subject of drive and SSD verification, indicating that its position may continue to evolve. The presentation ended with an invitation to engage with Synology staff during the event and a transition to the next session on data protection.

New / in-progress / future items mentioned:

  • Synology’s drive compatibility and accountability policy, with integrated monitoring, firmware management, and lifecycle support.

  • Synology confirmed it is still assessing customer and partner feedback on hard drive and SSD verification, leaving open the possibility of adjustments.

Synology and Data Storage Now/Future

Active Protect and the DP series was once again a heavy presence at this event and was more formally presented as Synology’s hardware-plus-software backup appliance family, structured around three guarantees: isolation, visibility, and auditability. It combines technologies such as high-rate deduplication (up to 80%), btrfs checksums with self-healing, immutability at the primary backup layer tied to retention policies, VM-based backup verification and sandboxing, and software-driven offline air-gap replication. These measures are positioned as protection against common and combined attack chains, including phishing, stolen credentials, ransomware, insider threats, and zero-day exploits. Large-scale management is enabled through clustering (tested with over 2,500 nodes and 150,000 endpoints), protection plans, and failover between backup servers to avoid single points of failure. Audit logs can be forwarded to external SIEMs and long-term retention is supported via Synology’s Secure Scalable Storage with WORM. Case studies included a Japanese bank with six appliances across DR sites, a Taiwanese logistics company consolidating over ten devices, and Toyota, which migrated away from tape to Active Protect in 2025, citing reduced costs and improved resilience.

The presentation framed the wider context as one where 70% of organisations have experienced data loss or attacks and 88% of those were unable to recover. The strategy was outlined as layered: employee education, least-privilege delegated administration, and backup as the final line of defence. Technical implementation details highlighted cloning instead of full copying, policy-driven immutability, VM-based verification, and software-controlled air-gap mechanisms as ways to achieve isolation and restore confidence. Visibility was addressed through centralized portals, cluster management, and protection plan broadcasting across sites, while auditability was achieved through extensive telemetry, monitoring, and immutable log storage. The brand also noted that it is working to further improve connectivity between Active Protect appliances and Active Backup for Business-equipped devices, aiming to strengthen multi-site operations and incremental migration paths. Deployment was described as end-to-end through Synology appliances, with hot spares and replacement hardware options to maintain recovery point objectives. The solution was positioned as an integrated alternative to mixed third-party systems, with the trade-off being a reliance on Synology’s single-vendor model for both hardware and software.

New / in-progress / future items mentioned:

  • Active Protect appliance family: integrated hardware-plus-software backup solution with isolation, visibility, and auditability features.

  • Protection plans and clustering: centralized policies for managing thousands of endpoints and enabling cross-site disaster recovery.

  • Software-based air-gap replication: offline replication without tape media, controlled through software and network port management.

  • VM-based backup verification and sandboxing: integrated hypervisor for validating and testing backups.

  • Planned improvements to connectivity between Active Protect and Active Backup devices to strengthen multi-site operations and integration.

Robust, Scalable and Fast Storage Now and the Future

This session focused on Synology’s enterprise storage portfolio and its positioning across security, efficiency, scalability, and performance requirements. The company reported that it currently manages around 350 exabytes across roughly 260,000 businesses and highlighted product families for flash, hybrid, and high-capacity storage. Security was presented as a three-stage process (protect, detect, recover), incorporating measures such as multi-factor sign-in, encryption, immutable snapshots, Active Insight monitoring, and replication. This was also where we saw a reference (2nd time this year) to the multi-site storage tiering service ‘Synology Tiering’ – catchy name, right? Sadly, this does not appear to be a deployment model that can be done inside a single system (ala QNAP QTier).

Efficiency claims included up to 5:1 data reduction, thin provisioning, automated tiering, and hybrid cloud integration with C2 and Hybrid Share. Hybrid Share adoption was noted at over 1,400 enterprises and 3,500 sites, with features such as edge caching and global file locking to support multi-site collaboration. The GS series (notably GS3400) was introduced as a scale-out solution for unstructured data, supporting up to 48 nodes, 11.5 PB per cluster, SMB and S3 protocols, and managed centrally with the GridStation Manager software and its dedicated Cluster Manager GUI.

At the performance end, Synology presented the PAS series, including the PAS 7700 all-NVMe U.3 rackmount system and a 12-bay SATA SSD version. PAS systems run on new Parallel Active Manager software and feature active-active dual controllers, RAID TP (triple parity), rate bitmap rebuilds, and cache protection. Demonstrations covered VDI boot storms, large-scale SQL databases, and EDA simulations, with claims of sub-millisecond latency and throughput in the tens of gigabytes per second. Security measures include network isolation, VLANs, and self-encrypting drives. The GS and PAS series were described as extending Synology’s ecosystem from large-scale archival storage to ultra-low-latency mission-critical workloads, all linked through C2 cloud services, Active Insight monitoring, and policy-driven automation. The company also indicated that further improvements are underway to enhance connectivity between Active Protect appliances and Active Backup devices, enabling more integrated multi-site operations.

The demonstrations of the PAS 7700 system were used to illustrate performance under realistic enterprise workloads. In one scenario, a virtual desktop infrastructure with 1,000 desktops was booted simultaneously to highlight predictable behavior during “boot storm” events. A second demonstration focused on SQL database operations, where over 1,000 concurrent users generated mixed read/write activity, reportedly sustaining more than one million IOPS at approximately one millisecond latency. The third example involved an electronic design automation (EDA) simulation handling around 1,300 jobsets, used to demonstrate the system’s ability to maintain consistent throughput and ultra-low latency under computationally intensive conditions. These scenarios were intended to show how the all-NVMe architecture and active-active controller design could deliver stable, high-performance output across diverse mission-critical environments.

New / in-progress / future items mentioned:

  • GS series (GridStation): scale-out storage, GS3400 unit, up to 48-node clusters and 11.5 PB per cluster, managed by GridStation Manager with Cluster Manager GUI.

  • PAS series: new enterprise rackmount systems, including the PAS 7700 all-NVMe U.3 48-bay system and a 12-bay SATA SSD version, with active-active controllers.

  • Parallel Active Manager software: new management layer for PAS systems.

  • Planned improvements to connectivity between Active Protect and Active Backup devices for enhanced multi-site integration.

Synology Surveillance Station, New DVA3000, DVA7400, Synology SD Card, Switches and More

This section outlined Synology’s surveillance strategy, built on two platforms: the on-premises Surveillance Station VMS and the new cloud-based Synology C2 Cloud VSaaS. Both are designed to scale across large environments, with CMS central management tested at around 3,000 hosts and 30,000 cameras, and real-world deployments exceeding these figures. Features include open APIs for third-party integration, drag-and-drop monitoring, E-maps, and bulk provisioning tools for rapid deployment.

AI capabilities are available on-camera and on-appliance, with functions such as people/vehicle detection, face recognition, license plate recognition, dynamic mosaic (privacy blurring), and smoke detection. An upcoming semantic video search will enable natural-language style queries across historical footage, and is cited as one reason for higher-capacity DVA models.

New hardware introduced includes the DVA3000 (4-bay, 40 cameras, 6 AI tasks) and the DVA7400 (12-bay rackmount, up to 100 cameras, 40 AI tasks, with a GPU included), both expected in early 2026. Additional components include three PoE switches and an industrial-grade microSD card designed for continuous edge recording and health monitoring, though final specifications such as SD card class remain unconfirmed.

C2 Cloud was described as a cloud-managed surveillance option requiring no local NAS or NVR, with built-in AI analytics, centralized access via browser or mobile, and failover to local peer-to-peer streaming when internet is down. The on-premises and cloud platforms are intended to remain separate at launch, though hybrid interoperability is planned in later updates to unify workflows. Security is built into both models, including encryption, MFA, granular access roles, privacy controls, and a product security incident response team supported by a bug bounty program.

Customer examples ranged from schools and stadiums to large government deployments, highlighting scalability, API-based third-party integration, and operational improvements such as automated crowd counting and smoke detection. Licensing continues to follow Synology’s low-overhead approach for on-prem setups, with cloud plans bundling AI features directly. The roadmap places new cameras in Q4 2025 and the DVA models in early 2026, with hybrid operation features to follow.

When asked directly about the status of hard drive compatibility in the new surveillance systems, including whether support would be limited to Synology-branded HDDs or extend to commonly used models such as WD Purple and Seagate SkyHawk, Synology was unable to provide a clear confirmation. The company indicated that final details on drive verification and supported models for these upcoming surveillance platforms remain under review.

New / in-progress / future items mentioned:

  • DVA3000: 4-bay surveillance appliance, 40 camera feeds, 6 AI operations, expected early 2026.

  • DVA7400: 12-bay rackmount model with GPU, up to 100 cameras and 40 AI tasks, expected early 2026.

  • Upcoming semantic video search: natural-language video query functionality.

  • Three new PoE switches for simplified deployment and management.

  • Industrial microSD card with edge recording and health reporting (specifications still unconfirmed).

  • Synology C2 Cloud(cloud VSaaS): cloud-managed surveillance platform, launching with AI features included.

  • Planned hybrid interoperability between Surveillance Station (on-prem) and C2 Cloud (cloud) in future updates.

Synology and AI – New GPU-Equipped Local AI NAS in Development and More Optional AI Integration in Synology NAS

This session focused on Synology’s Office Suite, which is positioned as a private-cloud productivity and communication platform designed to offer enterprises 100% data ownership, on-premises deployment, and long-term cost control. Core services include Drive and Office for file storage and real-time collaboration, Mail Plus for enterprise email, and the upcoming Chat & Meet for messaging and video conferencing. A new AI Console was also introduced, intended to manage and audit AI usage within the suite. The platform targets organizations concerned about rising cloud subscription costs—especially with Microsoft’s announced October 2025 price increases—data sovereignty, and security risks introduced by unsanctioned use of generative AI. Adoption figures cited include over 600,000 businesses and 80 million users.

Synology Drive and Office were presented as tools for structured file management and collaborative editing of documents, spreadsheets, and presentations. Features include file requests, configurable link sharing, audit logs, watermarking, and remote wiping. A case study from Yonsei University Medical Center highlighted the replacement of a Windows-based file system with Synology Drive, enabling centralized permission management, endpoint oversight, and synchronization across 15,000 employee devices. Mail Plus adds enterprise-grade email features, such as domain sharing for multi-site deployments, active-active clustering for high availability, delegated role management, auditing, and moderation workflows. Together, these services are designed to offer core collaboration and communication functions while preserving organizational control of data and infrastructure.

The roadmap extends the suite with Chat & Meet, an on-premises platform for real-time messaging and video conferencing. It is designed to support over 10,000 simultaneous chat users and 7,000 video participants, integrating channels, group messaging, and video sessions into a single interface. Administrative tools include permission management and migration utilities to ease transitions from existing platforms. Parallel to this, Synology is introducing the AI Console, which addresses risks such as content injection, jailbreaks, and data leakage by providing de-identification, provider management, permission settings, and auditing. The console will also support on-prem GPU-backed AI models for tasks such as semantic search, OCR, and speech-to-text, and is planned to integrate with OpenAI-compatible and self-hosted LLMs via MSCP.

The overarching message is that Synology is extending its productivity ecosystem to address enterprise concerns about cost, security, and compliance while enabling new collaboration and AI capabilities. The suite’s design emphasizes continuity through high-availability clustering, role-based administration, and unified consoles for policy enforcement and auditing. With the AI Console, Synology seeks to embed governance into AI usage, allowing enterprises to adopt advanced tools without exposing sensitive data to uncontrolled environments. Looking forward, further integration of GPU-enabled AI features and the addition of Chat & Meet mark key developments in Synology’s private-cloud strategy, aimed at providing alternatives to mainstream SaaS ecosystems while maintaining operational control.

New / in-progress / future items mentioned:

  • Chat & Meet: on-premises messaging and video conferencing platform, supporting large-scale deployments.

  • AI Console: centralized AI governance with de-identification, provider management, permissions, and auditing.

  • Planned GPU-backed AI models: semantic search, OCR, image recognition, and speech-to-text.

  • Integration with third-party and on-prem AI servers: OpenAI-compatible and self-hosted models via MSCP.

📧 SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER 🔔


    🔒 Join Inner Circle

    Get an alert every time something gets added to this specific article!


    Want to follow specific category? 📧 Subscribe

    This description contains links to Amazon. These links will take you to some of the products mentioned in today's content. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. Visit the NASCompares Deal Finder to find the best place to buy this device in your region, based on Service, Support and Reputation - Just Search for your NAS Drive in the Box Below

    Need Advice on Data Storage from an Expert?

    Finally, for free advice about your setup, just leave a message in the comments below here at NASCompares.com and we will get back to you. Need Help? Where possible (and where appropriate) please provide as much information about your requirements, as then I can arrange the best answer and solution to your needs. Do not worry about your e-mail address being required, it will NOT be used in a mailing list and will NOT be used in any way other than to respond to your enquiry.

      By clicking SEND you accept this Privacy Policy
      Question will be added on Q&A forum. You will receive an email from us when someone replies to it.
      🔒Private Fast Track Message (1-24Hours)

      TRY CHAT Terms and Conditions
      If you like this service, please consider supporting us. We use affiliate links on the blog allowing NAScompares information and advice service to be free of charge to you.Anything you purchase on the day you click on our links will generate a small commission which isused to run the website. Here is a link for Amazon and B&H.You can also get me a ☕ Ko-fi or old school Paypal. Thanks!To find out more about how to support this advice service check HEREIf you need to fix or configure a NAS, check Fiver Have you thought about helping others with your knowledge? Find Instructions Here  
       
      Or support us by using our affiliate links on Amazon UK and Amazon US
          
       
      Alternatively, why not ask me on the ASK NASCompares forum, by clicking the button below. This is a community hub that serves as a place that I can answer your question, chew the fat, share new release information and even get corrections posted. I will always get around to answering ALL queries, but as a one-man operation, I cannot promise speed! So by sharing your query in the ASK NASCompares section below, you can get a better range of solutions and suggestions, alongside my own.

      ☕ WE LOVE COFFEE ☕

       
      locked content ko-fi subscribe

      Discover more from NAS Compares

      Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.


      DISCUSS with others your opinion about this subject.
      ASK questions to NAS community
      SHARE more details what you have found on this subject
      CONTRIBUTE with your own article or review. Click HERE
      IMPROVE this niche ecosystem, let us know what to change/fix on this site
      EARN KO-FI Share your knowledge with others and get paid for it! Click HERE

      ASK YOUR QUESTIONS HERE!

      47 thoughts on “Synology Solution Exhibition 2025 – What We Saw, What We Learned

      1. I use AI, but for the most part, I find it is not advanced enough to do what I ask of it, and I don’t ask it for the type of functions covered in this video. I don’t need it for office apps. I can write my own material. I have been making complex spreadsheets for decades. I want an AI that can do much more complex tasks. Other than surveillance, I don’t know what I would want an AI for in a NAS. The AI in their cameras has been useful in people and vehicle detection and alerting. I’d like to see a more advanced and robust DVA model come out, but they seem to have either abandoned the DVA line, or put it on the back burner.

        I’m not for or against AI. It’s just a tool. A misnamed one at that. As with any tool, what I primarily care about is what it can do for me. At this point, not much that matters is the answer. Once it does something that I care about, I’ll worry about how it does it, what the implications are, and so forth. Until then, it’s just a product I don’t need.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      2. Ok… 1 minute in and I just don’t give a shit about AI. Honestly, fuck AI. I don’t want it. I’ll give ya a like even though I’m not going to watch it. I’m sure it’s good content for those that care. ????
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      3. Why not let the NAS do what it’s names says -> Network attached storage…! Synology…..Yearh – I don’t care what they do, my door is closed in that direction… skipping this video, sorry ????
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      4. Synology is so passe. Remember back when they alienated all their customers with ridiculously high-priced and under-sized drives as required purchases? Whew. Glad those days are gone and behind us. TrueNAS is where it’s at, now. 72TB of wonderfully stable and easily managed storage space for practically the price of the drives. Never lookin’ back.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      5. The app based AI is a waste of time. If I am in a particular app I will use Any of the numerous AI options. What we need is NAS specific AI to allow me to search, catalog, discover and create based on my locally stored unstructured data. i.e. create a presentation based on all the information I have that will show how to “pick subject” and format it as a PowerPoint deck.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      6. Does anyone know if it is possible to use Synology AI Console with a local AI?
        Connecting your personal information to cloud-based AI is one of the biggest mistakes people can make. Only private AI that you run locally is truly secure
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      7. Soo … heres the thing.
        A company who has openly broken trust with their customer base and hijacked that same customer bases ability to continue with Synology’s products by way of hardware upgrades, because of a proprietary HDD program … is now telling us they will not scrape our NAS data, for them to sell to the highest AI scraping bidder.

        Sure … today they wont, but agree to it now, and then one day when they can claim plausible deniability, they will hop on a future revolving door of truth, and we will become a whole new level of being a product for sale.

        No, I dont believe them … and I dont buy it.
        THATS what the proprietary HDD fiasco has done.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      8. Not only do I lack care, I actively HATE “””AI”””, and I would rather sell my cherished 920+ and build my own NAS than let /any/ fucking company put “””AI””” on my hardware. Can’t wait for this bullshit bubble to pop.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      9. I may have missed something here, but as it’s likely users will be editing documents via a web browser connected to their NAS, why wouldn’t you use third-party AI integration tools that plug right into your browser and don’t directly mess with your NAS?
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      10. So this is where Synology spent their time and money.. on something most of us are not interested in. Money that would have been of better use upgrading the ancient hardware.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      11. The one reason I really want to switch to UGREEN is that their Photos app can recognize text in images and make it searchable. That’s the only reason I keep all my photos on my iPhone instead of putting them in Synology Photos, so I can search for the random word I remember there being in a screenshot I took two years ago. Synology Photos should really be able to do text recognition!
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      12. Do I have to buy GENUINE SYNOLOGY BRANDED AI CAPABLE HARD DRIVES to use SYNOLOGY AI? Or are we just giving them more ideas?

        I watched the video, but Synology stopped being an option for me, even at entry level extra backups, and saying “look here’s AI!” isn’t going to change that.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      13. ‼ *We much prefer to choose business partners who value their customers.*
        ???? *That’s why Synology always comes last for us. And that’s great—we haven’t regretted it for a second!* ????
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      14. AI … no, thanks.

        It’s bad enough when apps introduce local AI assistance, but when you connect outside your NAS to perform AI based tasks, then that’s an even bigger no-no.

        Synology has, alas, jumped on the AI marketing bandwagon in an effort to promote its products. However, what they’re doing is like running for more sales with a ball and chain around one ankle in the form of their HDD lock-in. If Synology believe that offering AI fluff will offset their lock-in policy, they’re mistaken.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      15. Running AI locally requires higher spec hardware in order to run smoothly while performing the other everyday tasks. Its been fine having the ‘best software’ till now that is able to run on low end components. implementing AI this way is just another silly move that will push its remaining customers away. Synology continue to amaze everyone with their decision making skills
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      16. AI as it runs off of LLM depends upon things that are L_arge. Unfortunately this dependency isn’t storage but instead is RAM and processor dependent neither of which are typical strengths of many NAS boxes which have grown from roots of Atom processors and the like. As such there will be a requirement to use AI-services. However excluding those running a Synology office (or mail), is there truly a NEED for AI on a NAS or is it a would be nice to have as it’s fashionable?
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      17. Don’t care. Synology is done. It’s just another step towards all cloud-based back-up they want achieve. That’s not where you need a NAS for. Goodluck whith that, Goodbye.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      18. I was mostly very sceptical about letting an outside program have access to my NAS. My knowledge is to limited to be able to see what it might do with my private files so I thought it was safer to not activate that. Would love to see someone who have the knowledge to look at it and tell what they can do.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      19. What is the point of using a nas drive as a pc? And not even that – a broker – I think I maybe missing the point of a network storage array?

        However, as always thank you and have a super holiday. You deserve it.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      20. Hehe, I was curious as to how Synology would run a local AI / LLM on their hardware, that was my assumption going in. It’s an interesting video nonetheless. I think my main concern is about sending data remotely, and perhaps not seeing the full impact of token use until after the fact. Perhaps Synology would be better off working on a dedicated local AI box if they wanted to go that route, if they wanted to isolate the NAS from security issues and also not wanting to re-design the hardware for their NAS offerings.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      21. Synology could invent a magical technological method for delivering remote sexual climax from their NAS devices, and it’s still not invest my money into them. They burned the bridge — failing to implemented Ethernetbeyond 1Gbps until 2025, 10 years too late ; discontinuing media codec features ; overly basic network, ridiculously simplified networking controls on their web portals… And finally the requirement for only Synology overpriced drives. Nope, never again. Synology lost my money forever, and they will not succeed in the enterprise world, because they broke trust in the geek community.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      22. Thanks for doing a thorough review. It’s nice to see Synology making an effort in this area and being fairly cautious. I’ll wait for a later version in a few years to try it out, but I expect to have a local solution in place by then. ????
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      23. @4:20, rather than a local AI it is cloud based… I’m sorry, NO-no-no. Just to support this great creator I put this video on silent and put it in the background for a full view..
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      24. Most Users just want decent gigabit speeds, powerful processors and the ability to use whatever hard drives or NVme drives they want. Who wants this Ai crap messing with your NAS ? What a huge security risk for any business.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE