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7 Things I Didn’t Expect After Moving from My Home NAS to Files.fm

7 Things I Didn’t Expect After Moving from My Home NAS to Files.fm

2026-07-06 · EN
#Files.fm #filesfm #home nas #nas

7 Things I Didn’t Expect After Moving from My Home NAS to Files.fm

For years, I believed a home NAS was the ultimate storage solution.

I enjoyed choosing the hardware, installing drives, configuring RAID, setting up remote access, and having complete control over where my files lived. It felt like the “professional” way to store data.

But over time, I realized something.

I wasn’t buying a NAS because I wanted another server to manage.

I bought it because I wanted my files to be safe, accessible, and easy to share.

After switching to Files.fm, I discovered that those two things are very different.

Here are the biggest lessons I learned.


1. I Finally Stopped Worrying About Hardware

A NAS is still a computer.

Computers fail.

Even with RAID, there was always something in the back of my mind:

  • What if a drive dies?
  • What if two drives fail during RAID rebuild?
  • What if the power supply fails?
  • What if lightning damages the unit?
  • What if the motherboard dies?
  • What if I forget to check the backups?

RAID isn’t a backup—it’s simply protection against certain hardware failures.

Today I spend almost no time thinking about disks or hardware health. My attention is on my work instead of the server storing it.


2. Remote Access Became Something I Never Think About

Accessing my NAS from outside home was never as simple as people claim.

There was always something to configure:

  • VPN
  • Port forwarding
  • Dynamic DNS
  • SSL certificates
  • Firewall rules
  • Router settings

Whenever I changed my internet provider or router, I usually had to reconfigure something.

Now I simply log into Files.fm from my laptop, desktop, phone, or tablet.

Everything is there.

No networking knowledge required.


3. I No Longer Worry About My NAS Being Hacked

This turned out to be one of the biggest improvements.

Every time I enabled remote access to my NAS, I wondered whether I had configured everything correctly.

Home NAS devices have become frequent targets for automated attacks and ransomware. If remote access is exposed and updates aren’t installed quickly enough, attackers actively scan the internet looking for vulnerable devices.

I didn’t enjoy constantly thinking about:

  • firmware updates,
  • security patches,
  • open ports,
  • firewall rules,
  • failed login attempts,
  • or whether I had forgotten to disable some service.

Today I leave infrastructure security to professionals whose full-time job is protecting cloud services.

That peace of mind is worth much more than I expected.


4. Sharing Files Became Almost Effortless

Before, sharing files often meant:

  • creating user accounts,
  • setting permissions,
  • generating temporary links,
  • explaining how to connect,
  • or troubleshooting access problems.

Now it’s usually one sentence:

“Here’s the link.”

Clients download.

Friends upload.

Colleagues collaborate.

No complicated setup.


5. AI Finds My Files Faster Than I Can

Like many photographers, I organized everything into folders.

Lots of folders.

Year → Client → Project → Final → Export → Version 2 → Final Final.

Eventually I spent more time remembering where I had saved something than actually using it.

With AI-powered search, I can find documents, photos and other files much faster without remembering the exact folder structure.

That’s something I didn’t think would matter much.

Now I use it almost every day.


6. My Home Became Quieter

A NAS never really sleeps.

Even when nobody is using it:

  • hard drives keep spinning,
  • fans continue running,
  • electricity is consumed 24 hours a day,
  • heat is constantly generated.

After removing it, I noticed something surprisingly simple.

Less background noise.

Less heat.

One fewer device running day and night.

It’s a small quality-of-life improvement, but one I appreciate.


7. I Realized I Didn’t Actually Want Another Server

This was probably the biggest lesson.

Owning hardware sounds great.

Maintaining hardware isn’t nearly as exciting.

Every few months there was something to do:

  • update firmware,
  • replace disks,
  • monitor SMART status,
  • clean dust,
  • troubleshoot network issues,
  • expand storage,
  • replace aging hardware.

I realized I had accidentally created another IT job for myself.

I didn’t buy a NAS because I enjoy system administration.

I bought it because I wanted reliable storage.

Those are two very different things.


The Cost Comparison That Surprised Me

One of the reasons I originally bought a NAS was because I thought it would save money.

But after doing the math, I wasn’t so sure anymore.

Here’s a fairly typical two-drive setup:

Item

Approximate Price

2-bay NAS enclosure

€450–600

Two 8 TB NAS hard drives

€350–450

UPS (recommended)

€120–180

Total upfront investment

€920–1,230

And that’s before considering:

  • electricity running 24/7,
  • replacing drives every 4–6 years,
  • hardware failures,
  • internet costs,
  • and, perhaps most importantly, your own time.

Now compare that with Files.fm.

If your NAS costs around €1,000, that same money could pay for approximately:

  • €10/month → over 8 years
  • €15/month → about 5½ years
  • €20/month → more than 4 years

During all that time you wouldn’t need to:

  • replace failed disks,
  • rebuild RAID,
  • install firmware updates,
  • configure remote access,
  • monitor security,
  • buy replacement hardware,
  • or worry about ransomware targeting your NAS.

For me, that completely changed the way I looked at the cost.

The hardware wasn’t the expensive part.

Maintaining it was.


Final Thoughts

A home NAS is still an excellent solution for many people.

If you enjoy building your own infrastructure, experimenting with networking, running virtual machines, or simply like having everything under your own control, a NAS can be incredibly rewarding.

But I eventually realized I wanted something different.

I wanted my files to be available anywhere.

I wanted sharing to be effortless.

I wanted strong security without constantly monitoring updates and vulnerabilities.

I wanted AI to help me find files instead of digging through folders.

Most importantly, I wanted to spend my evenings creating, editing, and collaborating—not maintaining another server.

Looking back, switching from a home NAS to Files.fm wasn’t just changing where I stored my files.

It changed how much time I spent managing technology versus actually getting work done.

And honestly, I don’t miss my NAS at all.