I’ve now bought a NUC and installed ROCK, so not using my iMac as the Core anymore…and wow what a difference in performance, both in speed and audio, can’t quite get over it…just using an AudioQuest DragonFly Red as the output. I was advised by one of the guys at NAD that I should create a separate user ID on the NAS to avoid any problems with the Synology OS, in that instance, it worked perfectly and I have adopted that approach with other devices on my network.īut having said all that, I ended up using my admin log on to the NAS for Roon, and that seemed to be fine. I stumbled upon this problem a few years ago when setting up a NAD M50 to share a NAS with other devices, the M50 wasn’t UPNP/DLNA, so just needed the drives mapped to be able to see their content, and I’d already had another computer logged in using the main admin identity and password. (Since NetDrive users basically use the same Google Drive API provided by NetDrive, it is recommended to register your own Google API key when high-speed streaming needed). The Map Network Drive window will appear. Next, click Map Network Drive in the Network group of the Computer tab. First, open File Explorer and then click This PC in the left-hand pane. Use your own Google API key when using Google Drive. Map a Network Drive With network discovery turned on, you can now map a network drive. ![]() What I’d done was to create a separate user account on the Synology for each piece of hardware, just in-case there was an issue with multiple sessions using one login. In NetDrive app, create Drive Item which connects to Media Storage and then mount to the PC. Re-Reading what I wrote made me realise it doesn’t make a huge amount of sense, sorry…
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