La saison 3 de Ginny et Georgia cartonne actuellement sur Netflix depuis sa sortie, le 5 juin 2025. Et si vous êtes attentifs, vous n'avez pas pu rater l'apparition d'une célèbre marque française, dans l'épisode 2.
Sony a annoncé une nouvelle fonctionnalité pour la manette DualSense, lancée en même temps que la PS5. Une mise à jour permettra de l'appairer à plusieurs appareils en même temps.
Ce 9 juin 2025, Microsoft a déployé une nouvelle version préliminaire (Insider Preview) de Windows 11 version 24H2, pour les utilisateurs inscrits au programme Windows Insider et qui ont choisi le canal bêta. Cette nouvelle build – numérotée 26120.4250 et diffusée via la mise à jour KB5060820 sur Windows Update – inclut des nouveautés, des améliorations … Lire la suite
The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) on Monday added two critical security flaws impacting Erlang/Open Telecom Platform (OTP) SSH and Roundcube to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) catalog, based on evidence of active exploitation.
The vulnerabilities in question are listed below -
CVE-2025-32433 (CVSS score: 10.0) - A missing authentication for a critical
Warp, the top terminal app with AI support, has introduced new features in its GA release, including MCP support and Refine for AI responses. The Preview release now allows image uploads and the saving of reusable AI prompts. I also found a few new features that weren’t mentioned in the Launch Log 3 post.
Synology franchit une nouvelle étape dans la gestion des données personnelles avec le lancement de BeeDrive 2.0, désormais en version bêta sur macOS. Cette mise à jour majeure introduit « Deep Search », un moteur de recherche intelligent fonctionnant entièrement en local, sans connexion Internet ni transfert vers le Cloud. Une avancée intéressante pour les utilisateurs soucieux de leur vie privée et de l’efficacité de leurs recherches…
Synology Deep Search
Avec Deep Search, Synology intègre des capacités d’intelligence artificielle directement dans son dispositif de stockage BeeDrive. Ce moteur permet d’effectuer des recherches avancées en langage naturel sur l’ensemble des fichiers stockés, qu’il s’agisse de documents ou d’images. Grâce à la reconnaissance optique de caractères (OCR), il est possible de retrouver des textes présents dans des images ou des documents scannés. De plus, l’IA génère des descriptions d’images basées sur les scènes, objets ou thèmes, facilitant ainsi la recherche de photos à partir de requêtes telles que « lever de soleil à la plage ».
L’ensemble du processus d’indexation et de recherche s’effectue localement sur l’ordinateur de l’utilisateur, garantissant ainsi la confidentialité des données. Cette approche « local first » répond aux préoccupations croissantes concernant la protection de la vie privée et l’utilisation des données personnelles.
Compatibilité et exigences techniques
La version bêta de BeeDrive 2.0 est actuellement disponible pour les utilisateurs de macOS 15 ou supérieur, équipés de puces Apple Silicon et disposant d’au moins 16 Go de RAM. La prise en charge de Windows est prévue ultérieurement. Le moteur Deep Search prend en charge plusieurs formats de fichiers : PDF, DOCX, PPTX, JPG, PNG, HEIC et certains fichiers RAW. Il est également capable de gérer des fichiers dans différentes langues, dont le français, l’anglais, l’allemand et le japonais.
Une solution de stockage polyvalente
Au-delà de ses nouvelles capacités de recherche, BeeDrive reste un dispositif de stockage direct (DAS) performant, offrant jusqu’à 4 To de capacité via une connexion USB 3.2 Gen 2. Il permet la sauvegarde automatique des ordinateurs, le transfert de fichiers depuis les appareils mobiles (grâce à la fonction BeeDrop) et la synchronisation de dossiers. Sa conception compacte et légère en fait un outil idéal pour les professionnels en déplacement ou les particuliers souhaitant sécuriser leurs données sans dépendre du Cloud.
Une stratégie tournée vers l’IA
Le lancement de Deep Search s’inscrit dans une stratégie plus large de Synology visant à intégrer l’intelligence artificielle dans ses produits. Après l’introduction de l’AI Console pour DSM & MailPlus et l’annonce d’améliorations à venir pour la suite Office, BeeDrive devient le dernier produit en date à bénéficier de ces avancées technologiques. Cette orientation vers l’IA démontre la volonté de Synology de rester à la pointe de l’innovation tout en répondant aux besoins croissants de ses utilisateurs en matière de gestion intelligente et sécurisée des données.
En proposant une solution alliant performance, confidentialité et intelligence, Synology confirme sa position de leader sur le marché du stockage personnel et professionnel. Avec BeeDrive 2.0, l’entreprise offre une réponse concrète aux défis posés par la gestion croissante des données numériques. Si seulement le Deep Search pouvait arriver sur nos NAS…
Qui aurait pu dire que Blogmotion existerait encore 18 ans après sa création ? Pas moi !
A une époque vous auriez eu une pluie de concours et de lots à gagner, la Belle Époque diront certains !
Si j'ai toujours du plaisir à vous partager mes découvertes, astuces, scripts et l'actualité, il est vrai que le rythme a progressivement changé. Je n'ai plus autant de temps à consacrer qu'avant sur l'écriture des articles. Sans aucune publicité, rien ni personne ne me force à tenir un rythme, et c'est très bien comme ça.
Le format vidéo a éclipsé de nombreux blogs, c'est le cas de YouTube mais aussi de twitch, insta, etc. Mais certains ont survécu
Que tu connaisses ce blog depuis 18 jours ou 18 ans, merci pour ta fidélité ! Lâche ton petit comm si tu passes par là...
Et un merci tout particulier à yulPa qui héberge mes octets depuis de nombreuses années pour que vous puissiez continuer à me lire
During the Xbox Games Showcase 2025, Obsidian Entertainment shocked me by unveiling Grounded 2, the sequel to one of my favorite survival games of all time.
If there's one OLED AI laptop I recommend to everyone, it's the Zenbook A14. It just so happens to be $250 cheaper right now, dropping it to the best price yet.
Tragically, Hollow Knight: Silksong barely had any appearances at Summer Game Fest and the Xbox Games Showcase. Afterwards, though, Team Cherry narrowed down its release date window.
Si elle ne se vend pas partout aussi bien, en France, la Nintendo Switch 2 cartonne, en faisant ainsi la console qui se vend le mieux à son lancement dans l'hexagone.
visionOS 26 apporte un flot de nouveautés, dont une intégration spatiale de certains widgets, mais également une compatibilité avec un accessoire PlayStation.
La société de cybersécurité SentinelOne révèle comment des groupes liés à l’État chinois ont discrètement infiltré plus de 75 organisations stratégiques dans le monde entre l’été 2024 et le printemps 2025. L’objectif semble être de positionner des accès pour un usage en cas de conflit. Explications.
Sorry Docker, y’a un nouveau sheriff en ville ! Apple vient de lâcher un bombe à la WWDC 2025 avec son outil de containerisation natif pour macOS 26, et franchement, ça sent le roussi pour Docker. Fini les galères de performance, les ressources qui partent en vrille et les contournements foireux pour faire tourner vos containers Linux sur machine Apple ! Cool, hein ?
Si vous développez sous Mac, vous connaissez le refrain : Docker Desktop qui bouffe la RAM comme un goret (facilement 4-5 Go en idle), des performances de container dignes d’un Pentium II sous Windows ME, et cette sensation permanente que votre MacBook M3 Ultra à 4000 balles se comporte comme un Raspberry Pi dès qu’il s’agit de faire du container.
Quand vous tapez korben.info dans votre navigateur, il se passe un petit truc aussi sympa qu’indispensable : votre DNS transforme ce nom en adresse IP. Le problème, c’est que c’est souvent Google (8.8.8.8) ou Cloudflare (1.1.1.1) qui s’en occupe… et donc qui sait tout de vos habitudes. Heureusement, l’Europe vient de dire stop à cette dépendance avec DNS4EU, son propre résolveur DNS qui promet de garder vos données chez nous.
La société de cybersécurité SentinelOne révèle comment des groupes liés à l’État chinois ont discrètement infiltré plus de 75 organisations stratégiques dans le monde entre l’été 2024 et le printemps 2025. L’objectif semble être de positionner des accès pour un usage en cas de conflit. Explications.
Nouveauté majeure d'iOS 18, la fonctionnalité « Recopie de l'iPhone » permet de contrôler l'écran de son téléphone depuis son Mac. Bloquée dans l'Union européenne à cause « d'incertitudes règlementaires », elle ne devrait pas faire son apparition immédiate en France et en Europe.
Lors de sa WWDC 2025, Apple a présenté iPadOS 26, le nouveau système d'exploitation des iPad. Il s'agit sans le moindre doute de la plus grande mise à jour de l'histoire de la tablette.
La prochaine version de macOS, qui prendra le numéro de version 26.0, introduit un redesign majeur de l'interface, similiaire à celui de l'iPhone. Apple prépare aussi son Mac au futur des interactions homme-machine avec un nouveau Spotlight.
The Arkana Security extortion gang briefly listed over the weekend what appeared to be newly stolen Ticketmaster data but is instead the data stolen during the 2024 Snowflake data theft attacks. [...]
Over 84,000 instances of the Roundcube webmail software are vulnerable to CVE-2025-49113, a critical remote code execution (RCE) vulnerability with a publicly available exploit. [...]
A vulnerability allowed researchers to brute-force any Google account's recovery phone number simply by knowing a their profile name and an easily retrieved partial phone number, creating a massive risk for phishing and SIM-swapping attacks. [...]
SentinelOne has shared more details on an attempted supply chain attack by Chinese hackers through an IT services and logistics firm that manages hardware logistics for the cybersecurity firm. [...]
Synology DS1525+ vs DS1522+ NAS Comparison – Get It Right, FIRST TIME!
With the arrival of the Synology DS1525+ in 2025, many users are now weighing it against its immediate predecessor, the DS1522+, released in 2022. On the surface, both NAS units share the same 5-bay form factor, nearly identical chassis design, and very similar price points—typically between $699 and $799 at launch. However, a deeper dive reveals a number of meaningful changes in hardware resources, storage expansion policies, and how Synology now handles drive compatibility and system flexibility. While the DS1525+ does offer better networking and CPU core count, it also introduces tighter restrictions on what drives can be used, how storage pools are formed, and what options are available to users looking to migrate data from older systems. By contrast, the DS1522+ retains a far more open approach to hardware, offering greater freedom for enthusiasts and IT professionals. In this article, we’ll break down the internal hardware, ports, storage support, DSM software capabilities, and system behavior of these two NAS systems—giving you the context you need to make the right decision the first time, and avoid buyer’s regret later.
Synology DS1525+ vs DS1522+ NAS Comparison – Internal Hardware
The most noticeable hardware difference between the DS1525+ and DS1522+ lies in their processors. The DS1522+ is powered by a dual-core AMD Ryzen R1600 CPU, which operates at a base frequency of 2.6 GHz and can boost up to 3.1 GHz. This chip delivers strong single-threaded performance and is very power efficient, making it well-suited for environments where tasks are sequential or lightly parallelized—such as SMB file sharing, surveillance, or general-purpose storage. The DS1525+, in contrast, uses a quad-core AMD Ryzen V1500B processor running at a fixed 2.2 GHz. While it lacks boost frequency, the additional cores and threads make it the more capable option for multitasking-intensive DSM deployments. Workloads like hosting multiple Docker containers, running several VMs, or operating high-volume backup jobs are handled more smoothly by the V1500B thanks to its stronger concurrent throughput. While synthetic benchmarks might show the R1600 ahead in single-threaded operations, in day-to-day NAS usage, the V1500B’s multitasking benefits are more relevant—particularly for users aiming to centralize many services on one box.
Component
Synology DS1522+
Synology DS1525+
CPU Model
AMD Ryzen R1600
AMD Ryzen V1500B
CPU Architecture
64-bit, Dual-Core, 4-Thread
64-bit, Quad-Core, 8-Thread
Base / Turbo Frequency
2.6 GHz / 3.1 GHz
2.2 GHz (no boost)
Hardware Encryption
AES-NI
AES-NI
Pre-installed Memory
8 GB DDR4 ECC SODIMM (1×8 GB)
8 GB DDR4 ECC SODIMM (1×8 GB)
Total RAM Slots
2
2
Max Supported Memory
32 GB (2×16 GB)
32 GB (2×16 GB)
ECC Support
Yes
Yes
System Cooling
2 × 92mm fans
2 × 92mm fans
Noise Level (Idle)
22.90 dB(A)
22.60 dB(A)
Power Supply
120W External Adapter
120W External Adapter
Power Consumption (Access)
52.06 W
44.56 W
Power Consumption (Idle)
16.71 W (HDD Hibernation)
13.63 W (HDD Hibernation)
Chassis Dimensions (H×W×D)
166 × 230 × 223 mm
166 × 230 × 223 mm
Weight
2.7 kg
2.67 kg
Memory configurations between the two models appear similar at first glance. Both ship with 8 GB of DDR4 ECC SODIMM memory installed in a single stick and support up to 32 GB using both slots. ECC memory is a staple of Synology’s Plus series, designed to catch and correct single-bit memory errors on the fly—an important safeguard in RAID arrays, collaborative file editing, and database hosting. However, in practical use, the DS1525+ has more headroom to take advantage of this memory due to its quad-core CPU, making it more responsive when multiple DSM services are running concurrently. For example, users running Surveillance Station with 10+ cameras, Synology Drive, and a virtual DSM guest will find the DS1525+ holds up better under load, whereas the DS1522+ may begin to show bottlenecks unless its RAM is upgraded early. Despite these differences, both systems provide adequate memory for general use and can be expanded easily if workload demands grow.
Beyond raw processing and RAM, the DS1525+ also refines power and noise efficiency. It has a slightly lower noise floor at 22.60 dB(A) compared to the DS1522+ at 22.90 dB(A)—a small but welcome reduction for those placing the NAS in workspaces or home offices. Power consumption is another area of subtle improvement. The DS1525+ draws just 44.56 watts under active use and 13.63 watts in HDD hibernation, making it more efficient than the DS1522+, which consumes 52.06 watts and 16.71 watts, respectively. This improvement may be attributed to internal board optimizations and more efficient firmware tuning. Physically, both NAS systems share identical chassis dimensions, cooling layout, and component arrangement, including dual 92mm fans for thermal management. In sum, while neither model introduces radical hardware changes over the other, the DS1525+ provides a better balance of multitasking power and efficiency for modern DSM deployments—particularly when scaling beyond light usage.
Synology DS1525+ vs DS1522+ NAS Comparison – Ports and Connections
The differences between the DS1525+ and DS1522+ become more apparent when examining their networking and expansion connectivity. The DS1522+ is equipped with four 1GbE RJ-45 LAN ports, which support link aggregation for up to 4 Gbps combined bandwidth when used with a managed switch. This configuration provides solid redundancy and flexible port allocation, especially for environments where isolating traffic across different services (e.g., backups, media, surveillance) is desirable. However, in 2024 and beyond, 1GbE is increasingly viewed as a bottleneck—particularly for users working with 4K video editing, large VM images, or fast local backups. The DS1525+ addresses this issue by shifting to 2 × 2.5GbE RJ-45 LAN ports, allowing up to 5 Gbps total bandwidth through link aggregation, and faster speeds on a per-connection basis, even when using unmanaged 2.5GbE switches that are now more common and affordable. This change aligns the DS1525+ with modern mid-tier NAS expectations and offers improved real-world performance, especially for multi-user workloads and high-speed transfers from SSD caches or NVMe pools.
2 × M.2 2280 (cache and storage, Synology SSDs only)
Expansion Compatibility
DX517 (eSATA interface)
DX525 (USB-C interface)
In terms of USB connectivity, both models include two USB 3.2 Gen 1 ports, suitable for attaching external drives, UPS units, or compatible USB printers. These ports remain unchanged between models and offer no direct performance advantage to either system. Where the expansion capability does change significantly is in the port type for connecting additional storage enclosures. The DS1522+ includes two eSATA ports, allowing it to connect up to two DX517 expansion units, adding 10 more drive bays. The DS1525+, however, replaces these with two USB Type-C expansion ports, which interface with the newer DX525 expansion units. While the overall expansion capacity remains the same (15 total bays), the move to USB-C reflects a generational shift in Synology’s design language. USB-C may offer slightly more flexible cable routing and future-proofing, but it also introduces a hard cutoff between older and newer ecosystems. For users with existing DX517s or other eSATA-based gear, this limits backwards compatibility and locks the DS1525+ into the latest hardware infrastructure.
Additionally, both units include a PCIe Gen3 x2 slot for optional 10GbE network upgrades. Synology’s E10G22-T1-Mini card is supported on both models and provides a compact, cost-effective way to future-proof network performance. However, given the DS1525+ already starts with 2.5GbE, users may find less urgency to upgrade immediately compared to the DS1522+, where a 10GbE card may be needed sooner to break past 1GbE limitations. Both models support Wake-on-LAN and scheduled power events, and both feature dual rear fans for effective cooling regardless of network traffic or drive load. From a connectivity standpoint, the DS1525+ represents a forward step toward higher-speed networking and modern expansion methods—but it does so at the cost of legacy compatibility, which may matter for users with established infrastructure. In contrast, the DS1522+ offers broader port coverage and flexibility but risks becoming dated more quickly in high-throughput environments.
Synology DS1525+ vs DS1522+ NAS Comparison – Storage
At first glance, storage capacity and physical layout appear virtually identical between the DS1525+ and DS1522+. Both systems offer five main drive bays that support 3.5″ SATA HDDs and 2.5″ SATA SSDs, as well as two M.2 NVMe SSD slots for caching or, in the case of the DS1525+, full storage pool creation. Each NAS can be expanded up to a total of 15 bays using two proprietary Synology expansion units (DX517 for the DS1522+, DX525 for the DS1525+), enabling up to 240 TB of raw storage assuming maximum capacity drives. However, a major divergence emerges when we examine drive compatibility policies. The DS1522+ follows Synology’s older, more permissive approach: users may install third-party drives from brands like Seagate, Western Digital, or Toshiba with only warning messages shown during setup. Storage pools, RAID arrays, and DSM installation all proceed without functional restrictions, making it a flexible platform for users with existing drives or cost-sensitive deployments.
Allowed, but persistent warnings & blocked expansion
The DS1525+, by contrast, enforces the strict drive verification policy introduced in Synology’s newer Plus series models, like the DS925+ and DS1825+. At launch, only Synology-branded drives (HAT3300, HAT5300, SAT5200, and SNV3400 series) are listed as officially compatible. If users attempt to initialize DSM using unverified HDDs—such as a standard WD Red Plus or Seagate IronWolf—the installation process will be blocked entirely. This represents a significant limitation for long-time Synology users who are accustomed to broader hardware flexibility. Even after successful DSM setup, the system will not allow users to expand storage pools, rebuild degraded RAID arrays, or assign hot spares using non-verified drives. Persistent warnings and degraded status indicators in Storage Manager will appear even for migrated volumes, making the DS1525+ less accommodating for mixed-media configurations or DIY upgrades. SATA SSDs, while slightly more flexible in some scenarios, are still subject to similar warning behaviors post-install.
Further separating the two models is support for NVMe-based storage pools. The DS1522+ only allows M.2 NVMe SSDs to be used for read/write caching, and it permits the use of third-party SSDs for this function, giving users a cost-effective route to performance acceleration. The DS1525+, however, allows these NVMe slots to be used for full DSM storage volumes—but only when using Synology-verified SNV-series SSDs. This enables the creation of fast, low-latency storage pools using NVMe media, which is a compelling advantage for certain workflows (like media scratch disks or high-speed sync folders). Still, the restricted compatibility policy limits practical utility for those who already own quality NVMe drives from other vendors. In short, while the DS1525+ technically offers more advanced storage architecture, the DS1522+ offers far more freedom, especially for users managing legacy systems, migrating data from older Synology devices, or sourcing their own HDDs and SSDs independently.
Synology DS1525+ vs DS1522+ NAS Comparison – DSM Capabilities
Both the DS1525+ and DS1522+ run Synology’s DSM 7.2 operating system and provide access to the same broad library of official and third-party packages. This includes core applications such as Synology Drive for file sync and access, Synology Office for collaborative documents, and Active Backup for Business for system-wide backup management. The app experience is largely identical on both devices, with support for Virtual Machine Manager, Hyper Backup, Snapshot Replication, Synology Photos, and Surveillance Station. However, the differences in system hardware and compatibility enforcement subtly influence how DSM behaves and what features remain available under different configurations. For example, both models support up to 256 snapshots per shared folder and a system-wide maximum of 4,096 snapshots, but users on the DS1525+ will be subject to stricter compatibility enforcement in DSM’s Storage Manager if using drives that aren’t on Synology’s approved list.
DSM Feature / Capability
Synology DS1522+
Synology DS1525+
DSM Version
DSM 7.2+
DSM 7.2+
Max Internal Volumes
64
32 ▼
Max Single Volume Size
108 TB
200 TB (requires 32 GB RAM) ▲
Snapshot Replication
256 per shared folder / 4,096 total system snapshots
256 per shared folder / 4,096 total system snapshots
Synology Drive Users
Up to 60
Up to 80 ▲
Synology Office Users
Up to 60
Up to 80 ▲
Virtual Machine Manager (VMs)
Up to 4 Virtual Machines
Up to 8 Virtual Machines ▲
Virtual DSM Instances (Licensed)
Up to 4
Up to 8 (1 free license) ▲
Hybrid Share Folder Limit
10
10
Surveillance Station (H.265)
40 cameras / up to 1200 FPS
40 cameras / up to 1200 FPS
Maximum SMB Connections (RAM Expanded)
30
40 ▲
RAID Recovery with 3rd-Party Drives
Supported
Blocked
Storage Expansion with Unverified Drives
Supported
Blocked
Hot Spare (Unverified Drives)
Supported
Blocked
M.2 NVMe Caching (3rd-Party SSDs)
Supported
Blocked
NVMe Storage Pool Creation
Not supported
Supported (Synology SNV SSDs only)
DSM Storage Manager Behavior (Unverified)
Warnings only, all features functional
Persistent alerts, blocks expansions and rebuilds
High Availability Support
Yes
Yes
Full System Backup (Hyper Backup)
Yes (DSM 7.2+)
Yes (DSM 7.2+)
Where this becomes particularly relevant is during system migration or advanced storage scenarios. The DS1522+ handles drive migration and unverified HDDs without functional limitation. DSM will display minor warnings but still permit RAID recovery, storage pool expansion, hot spare assignments, and cache creation—even with mixed-brand hardware. By contrast, the DS1525+ introduces active blocks within DSM for unsupported drives. Users migrating from older Synology NAS devices using drives like WD Red Plus or Seagate IronWolf will find that, while the DS1525+ may import the pool, DSM will flag the drives as unverified and prevent future RAID rebuilds or expansions unless all disks are from Synology’s supported list. These alerts cannot be disabled, and they will persist across the user interface, making the system appear at risk even if the drives themselves are healthy. This creates a significant difference in administrative experience, especially for IT professionals managing multiple systems or resellers integrating legacy hardware.
In terms of user and service scalability, the DS1525+ supports slightly higher limits overall. It allows for up to 80 Synology Drive users and Office users (versus 60 each on the DS1522+) and can support up to 8 concurrent virtual machines versus 4 on the DS1522+, assuming sufficient RAM is installed. Surveillance Station camera and FPS limits are virtually identical, and both models support High Availability, Hybrid Share, SAN Manager, and central management features. However, the DS1525+ supports larger single volume sizes—up to 200 TB if upgraded to 32 GB RAM—compared to the DS1522+’s 108 TB ceiling. In return, the DS1522+ offers more internal volume flexibility with support for up to 64 volumes, double the DS1525+’s 32 volume limit. This trade-off reflects Synology’s shifting priorities in DSM: the DS1525+ favors fewer, denser volumes and more centralized control, while the DS1522+ gives power users finer-grained storage separation. Both systems excel with DSM, but your experience will differ depending on whether you prioritize scalability and structure—or open, hardware-flexible operation.
Synology DS1525+ vs DS1522+ NAS Comparison – Conclusion
The Synology DS1525+ and DS1522+ may look nearly identical on the outside, but they diverge sharply in philosophy, system behavior, and long-term value. The DS1522+, launched in 2022, stands as one of the last truly flexible 5-bay NAS systems in Synology’s portfolio. It offers a dual-core AMD Ryzen R1600 processor with excellent single-thread performance and supports up to 15 drives with two DX517 expansions. More importantly, it retains the traditional Synology approach to third-party drive compatibility—meaning users can install and operate a wide range of HDDs and SSDs (Seagate, WD, Toshiba, etc.) without system blocks. DSM will issue warnings if a drive isn’t officially listed, but critical features like RAID recovery, storage pool expansion, and hot spare assignment continue to function. That level of hardware openness makes the DS1522+ particularly attractive to power users, budget-conscious builders, and small IT teams looking to repurpose existing hardware. The DS1525+, released in 2025, represents a subtle but significant shift in Synology’s design strategy. On paper, it offers solid upgrades: a quad-core AMD Ryzen V1500B processor that enables better multitasking, faster 2.5GbE LAN ports for improved data throughput, lower noise and power consumption, and full NVMe storage pool support (with Synology SSDs). These improvements make the DS1525+ a better fit for users running multiple simultaneous services—such as Surveillance Station, Synology Drive, and Docker containers—all while maintaining smooth operation. However, these benefits come with stricter limitations. The unit enforces Synology’s 2025-era drive verification policy, which outright blocks DSM installation or RAID operations with unverified drives. Migration is allowed, but users will be met with persistent warnings, degraded system status indicators, and feature restrictions that can’t be bypassed. The flexibility to reuse older drives, expand arrays freely, or mix hardware brands has been systematically curtailed.
In essence, the choice between these two NAS systems reflects more than just performance—it’s a decision between openness and control. The DS1522+ remains a strong all-rounder for users who want to build their system on their own terms, manage diverse storage needs, or repurpose hardware they already trust. It’s well-suited to small businesses, creators, and experienced users who value transparency and adaptability. The DS1525+, by comparison, is more refined, but also more prescriptive. It favors users willing to commit fully to Synology’s ecosystem—those who prioritize simplicity, tighter integration, and long-term consistency, even at the expense of flexibility. It’s a better fit for turnkey environments where reliability and vendor support matter more than customization. Both NAS devices are excellent in their own right, but the right choice depends entirely on how much control you’re willing to trade for convenience—and whether your NAS should be a platform you shape, or a solution that shapes your workflow.
Aspect
Synology DS1522+
Synology DS1525+
Pros
– Broad 3rd-party HDD/SSD compatibility
– 2.5GbE LAN ports for faster networking out of the box
– Fully supports RAID recovery, expansion, and hot spares with any drive
– NVMe SSDs can be used for storage pools (Synology SSDs only)
– Better suited for drive migration from older NAS systems
– Quad-core CPU enables better multitasking and virtualization
– More internal volumes supported (up to 64)
– Lower power draw and slightly quieter operation
– Ideal for budget-conscious users and mixed-brand deployments
– Slightly higher user caps in DSM apps (Drive, Office, VMM)
Cons
– Only 1GbE networking unless upgraded
– Blocks DSM install and critical functions with unverified drives
– No support for NVMe storage pools
– Only Synology SSDs supported for caching or NVMe volumes
– Lower VM performance ceiling (dual-core CPU)
– Fewer internal volumes supported (32 max)
– Less suitable for users with existing 3rd-party storage hardware
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Lors de sa WWDC 2025, Apple a présenté iOS 26, la nouvelle version de son système d'exploitation pour iPhone. Voici les appareils qui seront compatibles avec iOS 26 et son nouveau design, le Liquid Glass.
Et si la vraie star de la WWDC 2025 c'était... la traduction ? Apple a fait beaucoup d'annonces autour de cette fonction, qui arrive (presque) partout dans l'iPhone.
Lors de sa WWDC 2025, Apple a présenté toutes les nouveautés qui arrivent sur les iPhone avec iOS 26. Parmi elles, la refonte de l'application Téléphone, qui n'est pas qu'esthétique : elle va vous aider à contrer les appels indésirables.
La future mise à jour de l'iPhone ne s'appelle pas iOS 19, mais iOS 26. Cette nouvelle version du système d'exploitation des iPhone a pour grande nouveauté un nouveau design inspiré du verre.
À l'occasion du Xbox Games Showcase, le studio Game Freak, à qui on doit les jeux Pokémon, a dévoilé Beast of Reincarnation. Et il prouve qu'il sait aussi faire de beaux jeux.