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Aujourd’hui — 2 juin 2026NAS Compares

QNAP TS-h265 and TS-h465 NAS Revealed at Computex 2026

Par : Rob Andrews
2 juin 2026 à 16:37

New QNAP TS-h465 and TS-h265 NAS Revealed (the Actual TS-464 Refresh!)

At Computex 2026, QNAP has revealed the TS-h265 and TS-h465, a new 2-bay and 4-bay NAS series that appears to move the company’s mainstream desktop range beyond the older TS-264 and TS-464 generation. Those earlier models became familiar options for home users, prosumers and small office deployments, largely because they balanced compact hardware, multimedia support, network expandability and QNAP’s wider software ecosystem at a relatively accessible price point. With the TS-h265 and TS-h465, QNAP seems to be revisiting that same part of the market, but with a more modern platform and a broader software direction that includes both QTS and QuTS hero. Full specifications are still being confirmed at the show, but the initial information points to a meaningful refresh rather than a minor casing revision.

QNAP TS-h265 and TS-h465 Hardware Specifications

The TS-h265 and TS-h465 are being positioned as the 2-bay and 4-bay successors to the TS-264 and TS-464 class of NAS, but the hardware direction is now clearer with confirmation of the Intel N150 processor. This is a newer quad-core Intel platform with integrated Intel graphics, replacing the older Celeron N5095/N5105 generation used in the TS-x64 family. The N150 keeps these systems in the same broad home, prosumer and small office category, but brings the platform forward with a more current low-power CPU design, updated media handling, newer memory support and a more modern I/O foundation.

Memory is another important part of the refresh. The older TS-264 and TS-464 used DDR4 memory, whereas the TS-h265 and TS-h465 move to DDR5 SODIMM memory with expansion support. This matters for a few reasons, not just because DDR5 is newer. These systems are also being built to support both QTS and QuTS hero, and QuTS hero’s ZFS-based storage environment can benefit from greater memory headroom, especially when snapshots, caching behaviour, metadata handling and heavier multi-user workloads are involved. QNAP has not yet confirmed all retail memory configurations, but the move to expandable DDR5 gives the new series a more suitable foundation for a longer product cycle.

Storage remains based around standard SATA drive bays, with the TS-h265 providing 2 bays and the TS-h465 providing 4 bays. That keeps the core identity of the range familiar, as these are still compact desktop NAS systems designed around hard drive capacity first, rather than flash-only storage. However, both models also include 2 x M.2 2280 PCIe SSD slots, which can be used for SSD caching or faster SSD-based storage pools, depending on the operating system and storage configuration selected. This continues QNAP’s push toward hybrid HDD and SSD setups in mainstream NAS hardware, allowing users to combine larger SATA storage with faster flash-based acceleration or application storage.

Connectivity also follows a practical refresh of the previous TS-x64 approach, with a stronger supporting platform around it. The TS-h265 and TS-h465 include dual 2.5GbE networking as standard, giving users a solid starting point for multi-client access, SMB Multichannel or link aggregation depending on the wider network environment. QNAP is also retaining PCIe expansion at the rear of the chassis, which is important because it gives users a path to 10GbE RJ45 networking without needing to step up into a more expensive NAS family. Alongside this, the systems include USB-A and USB-C connectivity at 10Gb/s, plus HDMI output driven by the integrated Intel graphics, keeping local display, multimedia and VM display use cases in scope for this refresh.

QNAP TS-h265 and TS-h465 Software Specifications

The main software distinction with the TS-h265 and TS-h465 is that QNAP is not limiting these systems to the standard QTS platform in the way the TS-264 and TS-464 were when they launched in 2022/2023 – QNAP has since allowed the QuTS ZFS OS to be installed on these older systems, but most users are already firmly bedded in on their OS, and upgrading requires a full system reset., plus the Intel Celeron N5105/n5095A chip wasn’t quite powerful enough to make the most ZFS in the way modern Intel Alder lake and Twin lake processors do. These models are being presented with support for both QTS and QuTS hero, giving users the option of deploying the NAS around the more traditional EXT4-based QNAP environment or the ZFS-based QuTS hero platform. For buyers looking at increased data integrity, snapshots, compression and more structured storage behaviour that the zetabyte film system provides over the EXT4 offering, this gives the new 2-bay and 4-bay range a broader role than the previous generation.

Another notable software change is the arrival of Qtier hero, bringing QNAP’s automated tiering approach into the QuTS hero environment. Qtier was previously associated with QTS, allowing frequently accessed data to be moved to faster SSD storage while colder data remained on larger HDD volumes. With QuTS hero h6.0, QNAP is extending this idea to ZFS-based systems, where HDD and SSD storage can be used in a more deliberate tiered structure. On a NAS such as the TS-h265 or TS-h465, this could be useful for users who want to combine larger SATA hard drives with faster M.2 SSDs, especially for mixed workloads involving file sharing, application data, active project folders, photo indexing or small business storage.

QTS remains the more familiar option for many home users, small offices and multimedia-focused buyers. It provides access to QNAP’s broader app ecosystem, including storage pool management, snapshots, user and folder controls, Hybrid Backup Sync, multimedia applications, container tools, virtualisation support and general file sharing services. For users moving from an older QNAP system, QTS is also likely to be the more straightforward path, particularly if their priority is Plex, Jellyfin, photo management, backup jobs, surveillance, sync tasks or general network storage. In that sense, the TS-h265 and TS-h465 still retain the mainstream usability that helped make the TS-x64 generation popular, while adding a second operating system path for those who want ZFS.

The timing also lines up with QNAP’s wider QuTS hero h6.0 push. The latest QuTS hero platform is being developed around features such as immutable snapshots, improved security controls, ransomware protection, KMIP key management support, FIDO2 login support, improved SMB handling and more centralized management options. Not every enterprise-oriented function will necessarily be equally relevant to a 2-bay or 4-bay desktop NAS, and some features may depend on final hardware support or deployment type, but the direction is clear. QNAP is trying to bring more of its ZFS and business-focused software stack into smaller NAS systems, while still leaving QTS available for users who want the lighter and more familiar setup.

QNAP TS-h265 and TS-h465 Price and Availability

QNAP has not yet confirmed final pricing for the TS-h265 and TS-h465, but the current expectation is that availability will begin in Q3 2026. As these models appear to refresh the same general product position previously held by the TS-264 and TS-464, the most direct reference point is the launch pricing of those earlier systems, which sat around $399 for the 2-bay model and $599 for the 4-bay model. However, it would be premature to assume the new systems will arrive at exactly the same level. Component costs have changed since the 2022/2023 generation, hardware supply remains affected by wider AI-driven demand, inflation has increased pressure on electronics pricing, and these are full turnkey NAS systems with a mature software platform rather than barebones storage boxes. For that reason, a price increase over the older TS-x64 launch figures would not be surprising, although final regional pricing, memory configurations and launch bundles still need to be confirmed by QNAP.

 

À partir d’avant-hierNAS Compares

UGREEN DXP4800GT NAS Revealed

Par : Rob Andrews
22 mai 2026 à 18:02

A New AMD Direction for UGREEN NAS – the DXP4800GT NAS

The UGREEN DXP4800 GT is a newly revealed 4-bay NAS that, at least for now, appears to be aimed at the Chinese market. It sits in the same broad family as UGREEN’s existing DXP4800 systems, but it takes the hardware in a different direction by moving away from the Intel processors used in much of the current NASync range and instead using an AMD Ryzen Embedded R2514 platform. That matters because this is not just a slightly adjusted version of the earlier DXP4800, but a model that appears to be built around higher network throughput, stronger multi-threaded performance, and a more capable internal hardware layout. For users who have been watching UGREEN’s NAS range develop over the last year, this feels like a separate branch of the product line rather than a simple replacement.

I would not look at the DXP4800 GT as just another 4-bay storage box with a new colour scheme. The early specifications point toward a more performance-focused NAS, with dual 10GbE, 4 SATA bays, 2 M.2 NVMe slots, ECC memory support through compatible upgrades, and 64GB of eMMC system storage listed in the official specifications. It also appears to be aimed at users who want more than basic backup duties, including media handling, Docker, virtual machines, photo management, and faster direct network access. That does not automatically make it the right NAS for everyone, and there are still details that need confirming, especially around wider availability, final pricing, and how flexible the system will be for users who want to experiment with software. However, based on what has been shown so far, it is clearly a model worth separating from the standard DXP4800 line.

UGREEN DXP4800GT NAS – Design and Storage

The DXP4800 GT keeps to a 4-bay desktop NAS layout, but UGREEN appears to be putting more emphasis on the physical design than just the internal specification sheet. The official material describes an aerospace-grade aluminium casing, with a thicker metal body, a large 14cm fan, and a through-flow internal cooling design. There is also a child lock on the hard drive trays, which is a small detail, but useful if the NAS is going to sit somewhere accessible rather than hidden away in a network cabinet. The model shown in the launch material also uses a black and rose-gold style finish, which is more visually distinctive than most 4-bay NAS systems, although final regional colour options have not been confirmed.

On the storage side, the DXP4800 GT is not just relying on its 4 main SATA bays. Each bay supports 2.5-inch and 3.5-inch SATA drives, with the official specification listing up to 32TB per bay, giving the system a stated SATA capacity of 128TB before the M.2 slots are included. The NAS also has 2 M.2 NVMe 2280 slots, with up to 8TB per slot listed, bringing the total advertised maximum to 144TB. One of the more interesting details from the official product text is the mention of U.2 expansion support through the main drive bays, which could make the system more flexible for users who want higher-performance SSD storage, though the exact implementation and limitations still need proper confirmation in testing.

UGREEN DXP4800GT – Internal Hardware and External Connectivity

Inside the DXP4800 GT, the main change is the move to an AMD Ryzen Embedded R2514 processor. This is a 4-core, 8-thread x86 CPU with a listed frequency range of 2.1GHz to 3.7GHz, and it also includes Radeon Vega 8 integrated graphics. That makes it quite different from the Intel N100 used in the standard DXP4800, especially for users who care about heavier multitasking, virtual machines, Docker containers, and services running at the same time. UGREEN’s own comparison material claims a multi-core performance uplift over the DXP4800, though I would treat that as a useful early indicator rather than a replacement for independent testing.

Memory is another area where the DXP4800 GT looks more flexible than a basic home NAS. The official specifications list 8GB or 16GB of DDR4 memory as standard, with 2 memory slots and support for up to 64GB at 2666 MT/s. The product material also states that the platform supports ECC memory, but the included memory does not support ECC, so users would need to replace it with compatible ECC modules to use that feature. That distinction matters, because ECC support is often mentioned loosely in NAS marketing, but whether the system actually ships with ECC memory is a separate point.Note – it appears on the official China sales page that the DXP4800GT is shipping by default with either 8GB or 16GB of DDR4 3200MT/s RAM, but not not ECC RAM. It IS supported, but needs to be purchased seperately.

Networking is one of the clearest hardware upgrades. The DXP4800 GT includes 2 10GbE ports rather than the 2.5GbE ports found on the earlier DXP4800 model, and UGREEN’s material refers to aggregation and bridge modes for different network setups. For a 4-bay NAS, dual 10GbE is a strong specification, especially for users moving large video projects, working from SSD storage, or connecting directly to a 10GbE workstation without immediately needing a switch. Of course, the actual speeds will still depend on the drives used, the RAID configuration, the client device, and the rest of the network, so the ports alone do not guarantee 10Gb/s file transfers in every setup.

The external ports are also fairly broad for a desktop NAS. The front includes 1 USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-A port, 1 USB-C Gen 2 port, and an SD 3.0 card reader, while the rear includes 1 USB 3.2 Gen 1 port, 2 USB 2.0 ports, HDMI 2.0b with support for up to 4K at 60Hz, and the 2 10GbE network ports. The SD card slot is particularly relevant for photographers and video creators who want quick ingest after a shoot, while HDMI gives the system more flexibility for direct display use or local media output, depending on how UGREEN enables it in UGOS Pro. The listed 64GB of flash storage also suggests the operating system has its own onboard space, though I would still want to confirm how accessible or replaceable that storage is before drawing conclusions about third-party OS use.

Elephant in the room – DXP4800GT is China Only …for now?

For now, the DXP4800 GT appears to be a China-first product rather than a confirmed global release. The official material and early product information are focused on the Chinese UGREEN NAS site, and there has not yet been a clear international launch date, regional price, or confirmed global SKU. That is worth keeping in mind, because UGREEN’s NAS lineup can differ by region, and features shown in Chinese launch material do not always arrive in exactly the same form elsewhere. I would not assume the final global version, if it appears, will be identical in colour, bundled memory, app support, or software services.

That said, I would be surprised if this hardware platform remained China-only forever. The DXP4800 GT uses a noticeably different AMD-based architecture from the Intel-powered DXP models already sold more widely, and it includes features that would make sense for a broader prosumer NAS audience, especially dual 10GbE, higher memory support, ECC upgrade potential, and a more performance-focused storage layout. The more realistic question is not whether the hardware is interesting enough for wider release, but whether UGREEN chooses to bring this exact model outside China or uses the same platform as the basis for a later international NAS. Until that is confirmed, it should be treated as a revealed product rather than a globally available one.

An Early Verdict on the DXP4800 GT

The UGREEN DXP4800 GT looks like a more serious 4-bay NAS than the standard DXP4800, mainly because it combines an AMD Ryzen Embedded R2514 processor, dual 10GbE, expandable DDR4 memory, 2 M.2 NVMe slots, HDMI, SD card access, and a higher-end chassis design in a single desktop system. From the information currently available, I would treat it as a NAS aimed more at creators, heavier home users, homelab users, and small teams than someone who only wants basic file backup. The remaining unknowns are important, especially global availability, price, third-party OS flexibility, and real-world thermal and network performance. Until those are confirmed, this is best viewed as a promising hardware reveal rather than a finished recommendation, but it is still one of the more interesting UGREEN NAS models shown so far.

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Synology Beestation BST151-4T – A 2026 Refresh?

Par : Rob Andrews
15 avril 2026 à 18:00

What is the Synology BeeStation BST151-4T NAS?

The Synology BeeStation BST151-4T is a 4 TB single drive personal cloud device that sits somewhere between an external hard drive and a traditional NAS, targeting users who want centralized storage, photo backup, file syncing, and remote access without dealing with a conventional multi bay server setup. It follows the original BST150-4T BeeStation, first released in February 2024, and appears to be a light refresh of that earlier model rather than a full redesign. As with the first version, the focus is on quick deployment, simple management, and a more consumer friendly software experience, using Synology’s BeeStation platform instead of the broader and more configurable DSM system found on the company’s standard NAS lineup.

Synology BeeStation BST151-4T Hardware Specifications

At a hardware level, the BST151-4T remains a very compact single bay network storage appliance with a fixed 4 TB hard drive, built around the Realtek RTD1619B platform and a 1GbE network connection. Physical connectivity is unchanged from the earlier BeeStation, with 1 x USB-A 3.2 Gen 1 port, 1 x USB-C 3.2 Gen 1 port, and 1 x RJ-45 LAN port, all housed in the same 148.0 x 62.6 x 196.3 mm enclosure weighing 820 g.

That hardware profile makes clear where the BeeStation sits in Synology’s lineup. This is not a flexible NAS chassis with room for drive upgrades, SSD cache, multi bay expansion, or faster networking. The internal disk is part of the appliance design, so there is no meaningful path to RAID redundancy, easier drive level recovery, or long term capacity scaling in the way there is on a conventional 2 bay or 4 bay NAS.

Power and thermals are also modest, which is consistent with a low power, always on personal cloud device. Synology lists power consumption at about 7.85 W during access and 1.65 W in HDD hibernation, with a 36 W external power adapter. The system continues to use a single HAT3300-4T drive, and Synology’s current 4 TB HAT3300 model is a 5400 RPM class disk rather than a faster 7200 RPM unit.

The one specification that requires care is memory. Synology’s March 30, 2026 product specification PDF and the current BeeStation comparison page both list the BST151-4T with 1 GB DDR4, but Synology’s newer BST151-4T datasheet, published later in March 2026 and mirrored across multiple regional versions, lists 2 GB DDR4 instead. On balance, the later datasheet appears to reflect the intended refresh specification, but Synology’s own published material is not yet fully consistent. (UPDATE – RAM on the BST151-4T is CONFIRMED as 2GB)

Assuming the 2 GB figure in the later datasheet is the correct final spec, the BST151-4T is best understood as a minimal revision of the BST150-4T rather than a new hardware generation. The enclosure, CPU, ports, networking, and drive class are effectively the same, while the main change is the move from the predecessor’s 1 GB memory configuration to 2 GB. That could simply reflect practical component economics as much as performance tuning, since lower density memory packages can become less cost effective over time as supply shifts. In either case, this still appears to be fixed onboard memory, not a user upgradeable SO-DIMM arrangement, so the platform remains closed in the same way as the original model.

Specification Synology BeeStation BST151-4T
Capacity 4 TB
Drive type Synology HAT3300-4T
Processor Realtek RTD1619B
Memory 2 GB DDR4 listed in the newer datasheet; 1 GB DDR4 still appears on some Synology product spec pages
LAN 1 x 1GbE RJ-45
USB 1 x USB-A 3.2 Gen 1, 1 x USB-C 3.2 Gen 1
Dimensions 148.0 x 62.6 x 196.3 mm
Weight 820 g
Power adapter 36 W
Power consumption 7.85 W access, 1.65 W HDD hibernation
Operating temperature 0°C to 35°C
Warranty 3 years

Synology BeeStation in 2026 – What can it do?

In 2026, the BeeStation platform is no longer limited to basic remote file access. Synology positions it as a consumer focused private cloud for storing, syncing, and sharing files and photos, with web, desktop, and mobile access, support for sign in via Google Account, Apple ID, or Synology Account, and shared access for up to 8 users on a single device. It is designed to pull together data from phones, computers, external drives, and selected cloud services into one managed location rather than acting only as a simple networked hard drive.

Photo handling is one of the more developed parts of the platform. Synology states that BeeStation can back up mobile photos, import content from sources such as Google Photos and iCloud Photos, and organize images with local AI based recognition for people, subjects, and places. The software also supports timeline and map based browsing, album creation, and controlled photo sharing, which places the BST151-4T closer to a private cloud photo hub than to a basic USB backup box.

Its data protection features have also expanded since launch. BeeStation now supports internal restore points based on snapshots, backups to BeeProtect, Synology NAS, and external drives, plus a 3 year Acronis True Image Essentials license for 1 computer. BeeStation OS 1.5 also added BeeCamera support, but Synology limits that feature to BeeStation Plus models rather than the standard 4 TB unit, so the BST151-4T does not currently gain the surveillance role that the higher tier model has started to take on.

Where the BeeStation still differs from a DSM based NAS such as the DS124 or DS223 is in breadth and flexibility. Synology’s DS124 and DS223 product pages explicitly advertise broader DSM functions including Synology Drive based private cloud workflows, Btrfs snapshot features, ShareSync between Synology systems, full Surveillance Station support, and the wider DSM application platform. By contrast, BeeStation remains a curated appliance with a narrower software stack, no general DSM Package Center environment, no broad package driven expansion path, and on the standard 4 TB model no BeeCamera surveillance support either. In other words, it can cover the main personal cloud tasks, but it still does not replace the wider role of even Synology’s entry level DSM NAS systems.

The BST151-4T looks like a modest revision of the original BeeStation rather than a substantially new product. Its appeal remains the same: a preconfigured, low friction private cloud for users who want basic file storage, photo backup, syncing, sharing, and remote access without moving into a full DSM based NAS environment. The hardware envelope is still narrow, with a fixed internal 4 TB drive, 1GbE networking, and no real upgrade path for storage expansion or RAID style redundancy, but that is consistent with its role as an entry level turnkey appliance rather than a general purpose NAS. Synology’s own later datasheet points to 2 GB of RAM on the new model, which would make the BST151-4T a small but practical refresh of the BST150-4T rather than a platform shift. Pricing is the main unknown at the time of writing. Synology’s support status page already lists the BST151-4T as generally available, but public retail pricing is still not clearly established. On that basis, the safest expectation is that it will land close to the earlier 4 TB BeeStation, which launched around $199 in the US and about £209 in the UK, while more recent BST150-4T retail listings have also appeared higher depending on seller and region, sat around $309 without TAX. That likely places the BST151-4T will land in excess of $300 and maybe closer to $350 when factoring the RAM increase.

Check Amazon in Your Region for the Synology Beestation BST151-4T

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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. [contact-form-7] TRY CHAT Terms and Conditions
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