Just trying to do some market research, sir! :) I think I've been pretty open about how it's done. There are clearly alternatives to the approach I describe. I'm trying to figure out if there's a market out there for this kind of thing that would make it worth my while to pursue it as a side business or full time. TANSTAAFL.
I realize that this is a hobbyist forum. The target market for this is mainly hobbyists, I think. Mainstream consumers aren't good candidates.
The concept I have in mind is somewhere between finished consumer product and a bucket of piece parts. Ordered as a unit over the Web. The value-add is the pre-verification that everything works with everything else, the integration of the piece parts, including software, into a basic working system and provision of a support infrastructure, including experience-based documentation (written by a native English speaker!). You could do this yourself (instructions below), but it's time-consuming and tedious.
The hobbyist-customer value would be in integrating it into the home theater environment - configuring the WHS and iSCSI connections, installing additional disk capacity, installing add-in components, etc. - by definition this is not an appliance and therefore not locked down.
I'd have to make enough from the exercise to pay the bills. Goal would be to price it such that the integrated solution costs roughly what a hobbyist would pay to put it together from scratch, perhaps with a small premium to recognize the value of labor hours saved.
That said - interesting or not? Here's the retail BOM cost for the configuration, based on what I paid to put this together, including software:
Chassis ~$400
Baseboard $95 (Includes GbE and video, on-board SATA not used)
Processor $125
Memory $80
LSI 8208ELP Controller $214 (cheapest 8-port PCIe I could find with the right connectors)
2x1TB disk drives $378 (need two for mirrored redundancy, 1TB for capacity)
6x1TB expansion drives Not included - add your own - that's the point.
Windows Home Server $149 (NewEgg)
DataCore SAN Melody $199 (vendor download)
Total: $1640
So $2K would be a $360 adder over the retail BOM cost of what it would take to build entirely from scratch. And I've just told everyone on this board how to do it themselves, so I'm not keeping the secret sauce very secret!
Is this a viable product at any price, or not? If so, what's the right price?
An existing commercial example of this kind of thing is the Inteset TeraRAID XV-NAS (http://www.inteset.com/products/TeraRAIDXVNAS/). I guarantee you that it's a LOT more than $2K, and it doesn't have iSCSI target capability. Comes with its own custom installer, which I assume is not what the hobbyist community wants.
Thanks!
Setup:
HTPC: Intel DG965WH board, , C2D 2.4GHz processor, 2GB mem, Vista SP1
Server: GbE to 8TB of remote iSCSI and WHS-managed storage