He Needs a NAS
Linus Tech Tips
0:00 I love my setup.
0:01 My top-tier gaming PC not only brute
0:03 forces its way through modern game optimization,
0:05 but it handles my Plex streaming.
0:07 Your what?
0:09 I mean, what?
0:09 I've got a great CPU with lots of cores, and the GPU is great at transcoding.
0:16 [sighs] Yes.
0:17 He's not wrong.
0:19 And if you've only got one PC,
0:21 combining these functions is perfectly reasonable.
0:24 But, if you're looking to step up your reliability,
0:27 not to mention the safety of your data storage,
0:30 a dedicated NAS, or network attached storage server, is the way to go.
0:35 And it costs less than you might think.
0:38 Not at the price I bought my hard drives at.
0:40 I may have splurged a bit elsewhere, too.
0:43 Yeah, well, look, I can't do anything about
0:45 the way that you dive into a new hobby.
0:46 But, you don't have to do things his way,
0:50 because everything Plouffe wants to accomplish today,
0:52 sharing Plex with family and friends,
0:54 off-site buddy backup, not to mention good old-fashioned local file share,
0:58 can be accomplished on basic or even second-hand hardware.
1:02 And if you're not any good at this stuff, that's okay, because I'm not either.
1:05 Notice I've never done a single network or storage video in the last 5 years?
1:10 No.
1:11 [music] So, we'll be learning together.
1:12 But, not until we all learn about our sponsor, Squarespace.
1:16 Do you need a website to help take your business or hobby to the next level?
1:19 Well, Squarespace has a ton of tools to help
1:22 make it easy for you to get started.
1:24 Check them out and get 10% off your first purchase at the link down below.
1:28 Here's what I've got: a computer in the living room, a computer in my office,
1:32 and me, a lazy pile of trash who doesn't want to get up once I've sat down.
1:36 I could use Google Drive or OneDrive
1:39 to share all of my documents across my computers,
1:41 but I hate the idea of sending things to the cloud
1:44 when [music] all of my PCs could just be connected locally.
1:47 Also, both of those companies, Google and Microsoft,
1:50 they just kind of keep getting worse,
1:52 [music] to the point where I might even be running
1:54 Linux on my main gaming PC in another year or two.
1:56 The plan is [music] to pop a NAS down under my desk here.
2:01 It'll act as a central repository,
2:03 and if someone wants to access my Plex account while I'm gaming,
2:07 it won't cost me any frames.
2:08 I am well aware that I could just buy an off-the-shelf box.
2:11 UGREEN in particular has some really compelling options.
2:14 But, as soon as I started looking at anything with six hard drive bays or more,
2:18 I ran into the starting at monster.
2:21 Also, since I want this to be more than just a NAS,
2:23 and I'm not sure yet of all the things I want it to do in the future,
2:26 a custom upgradeable build feels like the right choice.
2:30 It's also just more fun to pick exactly what I want,
2:32 starting with the CPU, an Intel Core i3 12100.
2:36 And I'll tell you all about it while I transfer all of the data
2:39 from my two 8-TB drives that I'm going to be upgrading from today.
2:43 This ended up being an even better choice than I initially expected.
2:47 With GPU prices being what they are,
2:49 I asked the lab to run some encoding tests to see if I can get away without one.
2:53 And it turns out the 12100 is great when it comes to direct play,
2:57 software encoding, and can even use Quick Sync
3:00 on the integrated GPU for great power efficiency.
3:03 Also, unlike AMD's 5800G or the spare GTX 1660 Ti I would have used,
3:09 the Intel chip has native AV1 support if that ever ends up actually mattering.
3:15 Guess I get to save some power,
3:17 which is one of the reasons I spent a little more in the first place.
3:19 There are much older and much cheaper
3:22 CPUs that would work fine for basic storage,
3:25 but that would come at the expense of some efficiency.
3:28 Plus, you know, who knows what I want to actually do with this thing,
3:30 so I might as well buy modern-ish hardware.
3:33 Let's check out the motherboard.
3:35 I chose the ASUS Prime B760M-A D4.
3:39 It's a little overkill, but it's got 2 and 1/2 gig LAN,
3:43 decent IO, and tons of expansion slots in an mATX form factor.
3:48 And since it's a couple of generations old, it's not that expensive.
3:52 Now, you might be saying, "Plouffe, you fool!
3:54 That board only has four SATA ports." But, don't worry.
3:57 I've got a surprise tool that I'll show you later.
3:59 Thanks, ASUS, for sending this guy over.
4:01 For memory, Work agreed to give me some on the condition
4:04 that I dig for our worst kit of DDR4.
4:07 But, with how things are out there, I'm not complaining.
4:10 Capacity is more important than speed for what I'm doing anyway,
4:13 especially if I want to run a virtual machine or two.
4:16 And if memory ever does come down in price,
4:19 I can always upgrade later thanks to my four DIMM slots.
4:23 What I don't have that luxury for is storage.
4:26 While I was planning this project, the humble hard drive got hit by the same
4:30 shortage that has rocked memory and SSDs around the world.
4:35 And it's at the point now where it's not even a question of price.
4:38 Many drives are just plumb out of stock.
4:40 So, on top of the couple of 8-TB I picked up from Weiler about a year ago,
4:44 I had to ask my brother to buy me four 8-TB IronWolf CMR
4:48 NAS drives all the way over in Edmonton for about 1,200 Canadian dollars.
4:53 Now, this is another area where you could definitely save some money.
4:56 Unless you have multiple heavy users working off of your NAS,
4:59 you probably don't need CMR or conventional magnetic recording.
5:03 The alternative is SMR or shingled magnetic recording,
5:06 which is cheaper and uses less
5:08 power while still offering reasonable read speeds.
5:11 The only downside is that it suffers during intensive write operations,
5:16 which those won't come up for me unless I ever need
5:19 to rebuild the data on my array in the event of a failure.
5:22 Please don't fail me, hard drives.
5:24 Please.
5:26 The plan was to tell you guys all about the stuff while I install the sleds,
5:30 and then I realized that these don't have sleds.
5:33 They just have little rubber stoppers that we're going to put on there,
5:37 and then they've got these nice front handles that you put on the front.
5:41 So, if you haven't guessed it, the case is a Jonsbo case,
5:44 which we'll get to in a bit.
5:45 If I was really smart, what I could have done was waited a week
5:48 or two before sticker bombing my hard drives.
5:50 Most failures occur at the very beginning of life or near the end.
5:55 But, let's face it, I wasn't going to put
5:57 together a system that wasn't covered in stickers.
6:00 I'll live with my choice.
6:01 And if I have to, I'll rip the stickers off and RMA the drives.
6:04 By the way, great tool for building a computer, LTT screwdriver, lttstore.com.
6:10 For my OS drive, I was lucky enough
6:12 to have a random 500 gig WD Blue kicking around.
6:15 I took one look at SSD pricing on Newegg and decided to use it.
6:19 If it dies, it dies.
6:22 It won't be holding any of my precious Linux ISOs anyway.
6:26 I also have a 1-TB Samsung 980 Pro that I was planning to use as a cache,
6:30 but Linus told me that if I end up going with TrueNAS or Hex-OS,
6:34 I may not have enough system memory to properly take advantage of L2ARC.
6:39 He recommended either using it to store virtual machines
6:41 or to simply sell it and recoup some of my project budget,
6:44 cuz yeah, these hard drives cost a pretty penny.
6:47 Now, it's time to answer the question of how I'm
6:49 going to hook up all these drives to this little motherboard.
6:51 Well, [music] the case does have a nice backplane,
6:54 but to connect all of that, we're going to use an HBA, or host bus adapter card.
6:58 The go-to brand for best reliability is LSI,
7:01 and [music] you can get them pretty much anywhere.
7:03 Just be cautious of counterfeits and make sure
7:04 you get one that explicitly supports IT mode.
7:08 That way you can avoid flashing the card's firmware.
7:10 With this installed,
7:11 one of my unused PCIe slots turns into eight SAS [music] ports,
7:15 which can be used for either SAS or SATA drives.
7:18 And just what case can store all of these hard drives?
7:21 Only the Jonsbo N1 5.
7:24 Okay, many others could.
7:26 Hell, two strips of acrylic could hold them all, but this is what I chose.
7:30 It's massive, but I wanted it for a few reasons.
7:34 First and foremost, it's beautiful, and it really vibes with my space.
7:38 Second, it supports up to 12 3 and 1/2-in drives,
7:42 getting me a ton of room to grow into my new data hoarding obsession.
7:46 And third, cable management is going to be a breeze.
7:50 Oh, and I like that it has USB-C on the front.
7:52 That's great if I ever need to ingest bulk data a little faster in the future.
7:55 Since we're not sucking back much power without a dedicated GPU,
7:58 I went with a little 500-W SFX power supply from Silverstone.
8:01 I decided on this and asked Silverstone to send
8:05 it over before choosing the Jonsbo N1 5.
8:08 Could have used a regular-size unit, but this one will fit just fine.
8:12 Besides, you know, if you're building a NAS at home,
8:13 you're probably building it in an SFF case,
8:15 and so you'll need something small like this.
8:18 But, before I install the power supply, my copy's done.
8:21 So, I'm going to pop these last two drives in first.
8:23 [music] Minor issue, the adapter plate that came with the Silverstone
8:34 power supply got this lip on it, and it makes our screws sit really proud.
8:38 And flipping it over just looks wrong.
8:42 And also, it's doesn't look like that's supposed to happen that way.
8:44 So, luckily, I work somewhere that has
8:46 extra power supplies kind of just lying around.
8:49 That means I grabbed this MAG A550BN 550-W from MSI,
8:54 and I'm going to use this today.
8:56 Luckily, this supports ATX power supplies, so I'm sorry, Silverstone.
9:00 Thanks for sending it.
9:01 I'm sure it's a great unit.
9:02 Let's pop this in.
9:04 [music] Moment of truth, it's all put together.
9:11 Let's see if I did anything wrong.
9:13 The monitor detects something.
9:20 [gasps] 1 2 3 4 5 6 drives.
9:22 And then, where is my SSD SSD?
9:27 The system works.
9:29 All right.
9:29 Overall, I feel pretty good about this build.
9:31 Yeah, it was almost $2,000, not counting my two old 8-TB drives,
9:36 which is a lot of money.
9:38 But, most of that budget went to the storage, which,
9:41 one way or another, I was going to pay [music] for anyway.
9:44 Have you looked at the cost of cloud storage these days?
9:46 And that's only going to go up as drives get more and more scarce.
9:49 At least I've kind of locked in on my pricing.
9:51 [music] But, this was the easy part.
9:53 I know how to build a computer.
9:54 I I of do it for a living.
9:57 [music] The hard part is the software element of turning a computer into a NAS.
10:01 The way I see it, I've got three options: TrueNAS, Unraid, or Hex OS.
10:06 TrueNAS seems to be the best bet for power users,
10:09 but [music] I don't really know if that's me.
10:11 Unraid is pretty flexible in how you utilize your storage.
10:14 Pretty sure you can also just chuck in kind
10:15 of whatever size drives you want and it'll figure it out.
10:18 But, Linus really recommends Hex OS.
10:20 And because I was able to get a license because I work where I work,
10:25 it was kind of a no-brainer.
10:26 So, I've got my Hex OS media right here.
10:28 We're going to try to install it.
10:30 I've never done this before.
10:31 We'll see how it goes.
10:33 I went to Hex OS's website,
10:35 followed their instructions to flash my thumb drive with some media.
10:39 This should be easy.
10:40 That's the reason I picked Hex OS.
10:41 So, I'm really hoping it is.
10:43 I'm going to hit save and exit here, and away we go.
10:45 All right, we're going to select our USB partition two for our boot device.
10:49 Start Hex OS installation.
10:52 All right.
10:53 It's doing something.
10:55 Uh install, shell, reboot, shutdown.
10:58 I want to install or upgrade.
11:00 Okay, install Hex OS to a drive.
11:02 If desired, select multiple drives to provide redundancy.
11:04 Hex OS installation drive are not available for use in storage pools.
11:08 That's fine.
11:09 Okay, so I'm just picking which ones to select and then pressing space bar.
11:13 Oh, pressing space bar to select.
11:14 So, not big backup.
11:16 That's going to get wiped.
11:17 Um I want this 500 gig WD.
11:20 This will erase all partitions and data on SDH.
11:23 That is fine.
11:24 Proceed.
11:24 Yes.
11:26 Enter your TrueNAS admin user password.
11:28 Root password login will be disabled.
11:30 Extracting.
11:32 Extracting.
11:33 Creating data set.
11:34 Creating boot pool.
11:35 The Hex OS installation on SDH succeeded.
11:39 Please reboot and remove the installation media.
11:41 That should be all it takes to install.
11:44 Now, I should have to set up my actual storage pools and whatnot.
11:48 Let's do it.
11:49 Let's get started.
11:50 We'll guide you through setting up your new server.
11:51 All right, cool.
11:52 Looking for servers.
11:54 If you recently installed Hex OS,
11:55 it should automatically be detected when this device is on the same network.
11:59 And then if this doesn't work, I'll hit the having problems button.
12:03 Okay, we gave looking for servers a few
12:05 minutes here and it's not finding anything.
12:06 This is the sort of thing that normally
12:08 it'll detect it within like 10 to 30 seconds.
12:10 We give it an extra few minutes, you know, just in case.
12:13 Uh but I'm going to click having problems.
12:15 Troubleshooting steps.
12:16 Make sure that the server is running and has an internet connection.
12:19 Check.
12:19 Ensure the device you're using is connected to the same local network.
12:22 It should be.
12:23 Check that mDNS, multicast is enabled and functioning
12:27 correctly on both devices for proper discovery.
12:29 If the above are correct, then try restarting the server.
12:31 If you have a custom network configuration, try entering the IP manually.
12:35 Let's enter the IP manually because if I was at home,
12:39 I'd probably try just restarting it,
12:40 but we have a pretty different network than like
12:43 what my home network is going to be like.
12:45 Try to connect.
12:46 Looking for servers.
12:48 A new server is detected.
12:49 That's great and it matches my IP.
12:51 Perfect.
12:52 So, I'm going to claim that.
12:53 I'm going to enter my admin password.
12:55 Claim server error.
12:56 You do not have any licenses available.
12:58 Elijah.
12:59 All right, day two.
13:00 Elijah got my code from Hex OS squared away
13:03 and I should just be able to hit get started here.
13:05 And this time it should work.
13:06 Zero SSDs of six and six HDDs.
13:09 Yep, that's correct.
13:10 I don't know why that's a warning.
13:12 This drive has existing Oh, very cool.
13:14 Okay, so luckily I backed up all of my data,
13:17 but I like that it's telling me that two of my hard drives actually
13:19 have data on them and it lets you know they're going to be wiped.
13:22 Storage pools.
13:23 40 terabyte usable storage.
13:25 It automatically configured to the RAID Z1 or RAID 5.
13:28 I'm not sure which, but uh 40 terabyte, one drive can fail.
13:32 Yeah, that sounds good to me.
13:33 Almost done.
13:34 We've collected everything we need to get your server up and running.
13:36 To make it easier to find and identify your server,
13:38 you should also give it a name.
13:40 You know, most of ours are named after little municipalities around town.
13:43 I'm going to name mine after where I'm from, Yellowknife.
13:45 So, let's do that.
13:46 Uh and yes, this is going to wipe it.
13:48 Finish setup.
13:49 Initializing.
13:50 Preparing drives.
13:52 Welcome to Hex OS.
13:53 Here are some shortcuts.
13:54 Configure storage.
13:55 Configure users.
13:56 Add folders.
13:56 Install your first app.
13:58 I'm on the dashboard.
13:59 Uh everything seems to be running normally.
14:01 I've installed Plex.
14:02 Once I take this home, I'll actually sign into Plex and get all that set up.
14:05 Uh but that happens a little later.
14:07 I just want to make sure everything's, you know, running properly.
14:09 My RAM is working.
14:11 My hard drive pool has got 38.19 TB of uh storage available.
14:18 Uh folders.
14:19 Okay, so the other thing that I'm really
14:21 worried about because networking is not my strong suit.
14:25 Permissions.
14:26 I hate figuring out permissions in Windows.
14:29 It is terrible.
14:30 I am terrified of trying to do that in Linux without running into issues.
14:35 A huge part of why I'm going with Hex OS, that I've said multiple times,
14:38 is this should be brain dead easy and I should just be
14:41 able to make folders and assign users and we'll see if that works.
14:46 So, the next step is taking this home,
14:48 making sure it connects on my local network, and getting Plex installed.
14:51 So, let's go.
14:53 All right.
14:53 It's been 1 week since you got a NAS.
14:57 How's it going?
14:58 Pretty good so far.
15:00 The whole experience was uh a little easier than I expected,
15:03 but also much harder at the same time.
15:06 Okay.
15:07 Now, before we get any further into that, what operating system did
15:11 you end up going with that was easier and harder than expected?
15:14 I ended up going with Hex OS.
15:16 Really?
15:17 Cuz I was going to say like it wasn't that long ago.
15:19 Investment disclosure, I'm an investor in the company that makes Hex OS.
15:23 It wasn't that long ago that we and everyone
15:25 else under the sun recommended Unraid [music] for its simplicity.
15:28 I know.
15:29 And even even then watching, cuz I watched a bunch of videos on installing
15:32 and how to do initial setup and everything,
15:34 TrueNAS was definitely like, "No, I don't want to do that."
15:38 [laughter] And Unraid was definitely the more simple looking option.
15:41 But then I watched a few Hex OS videos and it's about 1.0 now.
15:45 Almost.
15:46 Almost.
15:46 So, I figured, "Okay, fine." Plus, I get the key.
15:49 Right.
15:50 Okay.
15:50 So, I didn't pay for it, which makes a massive difference.
15:53 [music] Um but I really did go with that route
15:56 just because I thought it would be the easiest.
15:58 Well, Unraid's a paid option, too.
16:00 Yeah.
16:01 So, they're both paid either way.
16:02 Yeah.
16:02 Hex OS still just seemed the easiest and it kind of was.
16:05 What wasn't easy?
16:06 Cuz I already know a lot of answers to that question.
16:10 Okay, so the install went fine.
16:12 I took it home.
16:13 It ran into issues exactly where I thought it would.
16:15 Windows file sharing stuff.
16:17 Really?
16:17 Yeah.
16:18 That's one part of my Hex OS NAS at home that does work perfectly.
16:22 The funny thing is, I've got two main desktops that I'm hooking up to it, right?
16:26 Yeah.
16:26 My living room PC Yeah.
16:28 that I went to do second, it was fine.
16:30 [music] Literally just logged in with the credentials, no problem at all.
16:33 My desktop PC, the one I wanted to do first,
16:36 was an absolute nightmare [laughter] to the point where I
16:39 spent like an hour or so troubleshooting and I got
16:43 to a point where everything I was looking at was
16:45 telling me to like buy Windows 11 Pro and enable stuff.
16:48 And I knew that was wrong.
16:50 What?
16:50 I knew that was wrong.
16:51 I knew that was wrong.
16:52 No.
16:52 No, no, no.
16:52 I knew that was wrong.
16:53 Okay.
16:54 So, I enabled SMB protocols.
16:56 All my private network uh stuff was working fine.
16:59 Everything was seeing everything.
17:00 Yeah.
17:01 So, I could see the machine on my network, but I couldn't access any folders.
17:05 I couldn't do anything with it.
17:06 Do you want to know what happened?
17:08 Had to be Windows credential manager.
17:09 Pancratz went there first.
17:11 We had to open PowerShell and he had
17:13 to change uh SMB client configuration setting requires security signature.
17:18 It was set to true.
17:19 We had to set that to false.
17:21 Why was that set to true?
17:22 I have no idea.
17:23 This isn't even a pretty fresh Windows 11 install.
17:26 That's so weird.
17:27 I reset my computer like 6 months ago or so.
17:29 So, it's not even an issue with your NAS.
17:31 No.
17:32 This was an issue with your desktop.
17:36 Yes.
17:36 Why is SMB still like this, Microsoft?
17:39 One in a million chance?
17:41 You're the guy.
17:45 [laughter] With it working.
17:45 Yes.
17:46 What's the first thing you did?
17:47 I started backing everything up, which took a while.
17:49 It was like 8 terabytes worth of data, but it was awesome.
17:53 Like I just I set the transfer going and I didn't even worry about it.
17:56 require security signature anymore.
17:58 So, it's all good.
18:01 [laughter] I've got Tailscale set up and running now.
18:02 I just finished that as well.
18:04 Want to explain what Tailscale is for people who are not in the know?
18:07 Tailscale is basically a way to SSH into your machine
18:11 and add uh virtual networking to uh other users.
18:14 So, that like if my cousin wants to go on to my NAS, I give him my Well,
18:18 he has his own Tailscale and then he
18:19 logs in and through my invite and gets access.
18:22 And you can do that without opening up ports.
18:24 Indeed.
18:25 Traditional way that you would allow someone else
18:27 to access a resource that's on your internal network.
18:30 Yeah, it's much safer.
18:31 But the funny thing is,
18:32 what really has been enjoyable about this whole experience
18:35 is I feel like I'm learning stuff about computers again.
18:37 Oh, that's cool.
18:37 Yeah.
18:38 Like I actually like Oh, networking's a whole new Pandora's Box, though.
18:41 I'm well aware and it was a terrifying one for the longest time.
18:44 But now that I have like my own I mean, it's not really a home lab,
18:47 but now that I kind of have my own little home lab,
18:48 I'm like, "Oh yeah, I'll try that." Like whatever.
18:50 I'll set this up and dig through troubleshooting guides and spend
18:53 a bunch of time doing it and it's enjoyable cuz everything works.
18:57 And if it breaks, it's not the end of the world
18:59 cuz I know how to set it up again.
19:01 With that said, there's a big difference between, "Yeah,
19:03 this is a pretty good experience for me and I enjoy working on it." And
19:08 "This is something I would recommend to my family
19:10 and friends or my parents." Where are we at right now?
19:14 If everything had gone as smoothly as it was supposed to It's a big if.
19:18 100% it is.
19:19 I would be okay with helping my dad or someone else who's less
19:24 tech literate set this up in their home remotely with me being remote.
19:28 The setup and everything was really simple.
19:31 Yeah.
19:31 The UI is good.
19:32 It's really easy to use and navigate.
19:35 But as soon as they get into some kind of error [laughter]
19:38 that the documentation isn't going to cover, like what I encountered, like sure,
19:41 I know how to fix that now going forward and so
19:43 that's something that's added to my own
19:45 troubleshooting repertoire, but like Yeah.
19:48 I wouldn't expect them to do
19:49 this on their own assuming there's something that goes wrong.
19:54 If the process is perfect or like perfecter than it is now, yes,
19:59 I think this is something even my sister or my dad could do.
20:02 Now that that's all sorted,
20:03 it's fine and it works great and like I'm just doing whatever I want.
20:07 The flexibility overall of everything has been [music] so nice.
20:11 Yeah, like I just you know I make sure
20:13 that whatever I'm working on is on my NAS instead
20:16 of on my desktop locally and then I can
20:18 just move to the couch and open the file there.
20:21 And then oh I'm halfway done and now I want
20:23 to sit at my desk with like music playing or something, I just go over there.
20:26 And you're on Tailscale.
20:28 So if you wanted to go to a cafe and work on it there, boom.
20:32 It's pretty cool and you never worry about okay,
20:36 I'm in the middle of this draft and coffee spills on my laptop,
20:40 it's gone or I'm taking all of this personal information
20:44 and I'm synchronizing it with some corporate cloud service somewhere.
20:48 You own your freaking data.
20:50 Yeah, that's the bottom line with a NAS.
20:52 Which is a huge deal to me.
20:54 Is it more work than subscribing to you know Google One?
20:59 I mean yeah, it's more work, yeah,
21:01 but like in the longer time you can pay yourself to do that work
21:04 in the money that you will eventually save
21:07 not subscribing to someone's service because it's just math.
21:11 Eventually if you're going to use that storage,
21:14 eventually you must pay for those hard drives.
21:17 100% whether you buy them and put them in your home or whether
21:20 you pay for Google to put them in a data center somewhere.
21:23 And now I've got all my digital photos backed up somewhere safe.
21:26 I've got other files like everything.
21:28 With that said, a single NAS offers redundancy
21:32 but is not in and of itself a backup.
21:34 So the next level would be that I've talked to the priority
21:39 for me as kind of an activist investor that they implement buddy backup.
21:44 Yeah, and so that's intended to be
21:46 a feature where for no additional subscription fee,
21:49 you and a buddy like me and Plouffe could be like okay, here.
21:53 I bought an 8 terabyte drive, here you go buddy.
21:56 You buy an 8 terabyte drive, you give it to me, here you go buddy.
21:59 We put those into our NASes, we now have some extra space and we can
22:02 set aside an encrypted folder that can automatically synchronize.
22:06 But yeah, right now it's just I feel like I
22:09 can breathe easy knowing that everything's backed up and like yeah,
22:12 it's not a 321 fully cuz I don't have a offsite yet but once that's there,
22:16 I will finally actually be practicing what I've preached to so
22:19 many people [laughter] over the You know what else we preach?
22:26 What?
22:27 The gospel of the Segway to our sponsor, Squarespace.
22:31 They've made it even easier than before to build
22:33 a website that matches your brand and personality.
22:36 Thanks to their design intelligence tool,
22:38 with a few prompts you can start with a template
22:40 for your webpage that matches the vibes that you're going for.
22:43 From there, it's as easy as replacing assets,
22:46 moving things around with the drag and drop
22:47 interface and then you're up and running.
22:50 If you need to, you can invoice clients directly through
22:53 the Squarespace platform with compatibility
22:55 for major payment methods like debit, Apple Pay, Klarna and more.
22:59 Squarespace will even help you find the right domain for your business
23:02 and give you SEO tools and tips to help your website discoverability.
23:06 Track your website's performance with a variety
23:09 of analytics and adjust your webpage as needed.
23:11 We have even used Squarespace for our Linus
23:14 Media Group website for years at this point.
23:16 Start building your website today and receive
23:17 10% off your first purchase by visiting squarespace.com/ltt.
23:23 If you guys enjoyed this video,
23:24 why not check out the build that we did for Mark Rober actually.
23:28 I'd say that's a pretty good modern take on a like balls to the wall home NAS.