![]() I am away from home right now but I did keep notes about this after I found the info on the internet. In Windows, the Synology will show up in Windows Explorer (open up the Network item in the panel on the left) which makes it easy to move music files around. For copying music, you can use the “Upload” function in File Station, or use the usual copy/paste functions from Windows. I don’t use JRiver so others will have to help there, but for JRiver I think you are done except for copying the music onto the NAS and then setting the configuration options in JRiver, which is a bit complicated. I’m not clear about whether you want to use JRiver as your music player, which will mean leaving the computer running all the time, or install a server on your NAS. ![]() You need to give each folder appropriate permissions – this is different than what I was used to on Windows, but not hard. At the root level these need to be shared folders (“Create shared folder” not “Create folder”) or it will be hard to work with the folders from your PC. Then use the File Station app that comes with DSM (the Synology operating system, Disk Station Manager) to create folders to store your music. Once that’s done you don’t need it anymore. Install this on your PC and it will help your PC or Mac talk to the NAS, set up your admin accounts, etc. The CD that came with your Synology NAS should have a program on it that, IIRC, is called “Synology assistant” or something similar.
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