The DS214se uses the chassis design of a much older generation, such as the DS410 that came out four years ago. This means you have to open the chassis before you can install or replace the internal hard drives. While this is quite easy to do (you just have to undo two little screws on the back and slide out the left side of the server to open it), I much prefer the front-facing drive-bay design found in new newer DiskStations, such as the DS712+, or the DS1513+.The DS214se has nothing to impress when it comes to its hardware components. On the inside, it's powered by a minimal Marvell Armada 370 processor running at 800MHz, and 256MB of DDR3 memory that's not upgradable. The "se" designation stands for "single-role," meaning the server is not designed to run multiple roles (tasks) at the same time. On the back, the server has just two USB 2.0 ports to host more storage or printers. This is very disappointing, since all the NAS servers that I reviewed last year already support USB 3.0 and have more peripheral ports.
Use "Unformat" to recover data after format Synology Disk Station DS214se external hard drive.
Use "Recover partition" to recover files if Synology Disk Station DS214se hard drive partition changed or damaged or deleted.
Use "Full Scan" to recover lost files Synology Disk Station DS214se if partitions show as "raw" or recover files which can not be found with "undelete"and "unformat" and "recover partition", recover files from raw partition,recover files of partitions which are not NTFS, nor exfat, nor fat32.
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