

This contrasts with the Pogoplug, which does not charge any additional fees to utilize the service needed for remote access-the service fee is considered to be factored into the cost of the $99 Pogoplug. The first year of this service is free, but after that, it costs $29.99 per year to continue remote access capabilities. What is not necessarily obvious, however, is that the remote access and file sharing capabilities of the device are dependent on an online service. It is available starting today, for $99.99 from Seagate and other online retailers. The FreeAgent DockStar measures 86x85x38-mm and weighs 0.5-kg. We appreciate all of the support and input from our community and look forward to welcoming DockStar as a new member of the Pogoplug family."

We are committed to innovation around the Pogoplug experience and our hardware device is an important part of our roadmap. "This is by no means the end of the Pogoplug product from Cloud Engines. While it is uncertain if there will be additional licensees, CloudEngines remains adamant that it is committed to supporting its own Pogoplug product: This actually marks the first time that CloudEngines has licensed out its Pogoplug technology. And we won't even get into the potential legal ramifications if you choose to share content that you don't have rights to, such as commercial music or video. But opening up photo or music folders for the world to see might get your ISP's attention-and not in a good way. If you just share content with a few family members and friends, you probably won't run afoul of your ISP. You should also check your ISP's service agreement to make sure your account is allowed to host files on a server, which is essentially what you are doing by opening up content stored on the FreeAgent DockStar to remote users.

davedarko wrote a reply on Flipper At Home.We will warn users, however, that if you choose to make content on the device public or link to content stored on it on a social networking site, you could potentially generate enough incoming traffic to exceed any bandwidth limitations your ISP might have in place for your account.
Seagate dockstar android#
Seagate dockstar serial#
Also, the onboard serial console has a header already attached, no soldering necessary. It’s a pretty nice machine, a lot better than my old NSLU2 – and it has the bonus of being powered on whenever it’s connected to AC power instead of having a power button, so it’s self-restoring after power outages without hardware modification. It’s got a 1.2Ghz Marvell Kirkwood ARM processor, 128 megs of RAM, and gigabit ethernet. I used the kernel patches from the second link in the post, and the precompiled u-boot and blparam from the Plugbox Linux guys. I couldn’t get the Sheevaplug Debian squeeze installer or lenny rootfs image to work but if someone tried harder they could surely do it I didn’t care enough as I already had the working Gentoo system. I’m running Gentoo on my Dockstar, got it for $20 at Woot.
