

The QTS 4.0 operating system behaves like a proper desktop OS, running in your browser. Once the device has been configured and the QNap software installed, you can gain access to the TS-212-E's user interface, which is accessible via your web browser. A single Gigabit Ethernet port gives you enough speed for a home network. At least there is a front-facing USB2 port and a dedicated button for one-touch backups as well as a further two USB3 ports on the rear. Observing the TS-212-E after assembly, it's not the most attractive NAS we've seen, and its shiny white plastic shell looks and feels cheap not least because the two halves of the chassis don't quite fit together snugly.
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While this wasn't a great technical challenge, we were bamboozled by the total lack of instructions for our device the only on-paper guidance provided told us to "install the hard drives" without any explanation of how to do so. The other disk requires two separate SATA data and power connectors (supplied in the box) to be connected to the device's motherboard. The two disks lie side-by-side, with one slotting neatly into SATA power and data connectors. There are screws in the box, which you'll need in order to fit your disks securely. Just a small amount of pressure on one half of the device and you'll have opened it up, revealing the somewhat unattractive innards. The most disturbing part of the process is just how easily the enclosure splits in half.
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It might be advisable for the less technically experienced to buy the TS-212-E with disks pre-installed we were taken aback at the convoluted approach required to install the disks. The unit we tested came without hard disks installed, but it is also sold with various hard disks sizes, the cheapest of which contains a pair of 1TB disks. The QNap TS-212-E is a basic two-bay NAS enclosure targeted at home users.
