Noise from the Seagate Personal Cloud was rated as Very Low you really had to listen for it in a quiet home office environment. But Seagate supports combining both drives into an unprotected RAID 0 volume. The two-bay version comes configured in RAID 1. If you’re pressed for budget or need less capacity, the 3 TB model is only around $170. Seagate sent the 5 TB STCR5000101 single-bay model for review, which runs around $250. The single bay is available in 3 TB, 4 TB and 5 TB capacities, with the two bay coming in 6 TB and 8 TB flavors. The Personal Cloud comes in one and two bay configurations. This time, however, Seagate is taking a slightly different tack and has risked increasing features, most notably providing easy remote access to the PC. The PC is once again intended for non-tech folks who just want a simple way to centrally store and or back up all the digital stuff we have sitting on our phones, tablets and other mobile devices. Spin forward two years and we now have Seagate’s Personal Cloud. As noted in the review, the Central was aimed squarely at folks who don’t know, or even want to know, what a "NAS" is. Seagate’s Personal Cloud replaces the Seagate Central I reviewed a few years ago. This products was retested with newer firmware.
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