Yes, the DXP4800GT can run Plex and handle multimedia workloads, but AMD hardware transcoding may require more setup than Intel Quick Sync systems, especially when Plex or Jellyfin is running in containers.
First-time NAS buyers who want the lowest learning curve.
Small businesses that value stable first-party backup and sync tools.
Home users who want photos, drive sync, backup and file sharing without too much tinkering.
Users who prefer a controlled appliance over a more open but complex platform.
The Flashstor line is ASUSTOR’s compact desktop all-flash NAS family, designed around M.2 SSDs rather than traditional 3.5-inch hard drives. The first generation leaned heavily into compact NAS and multimedia flexibility, while the second generation pushed harder into performance with AMD Ryzen Embedded, Gen4 SSD support, ECC memory support, USB4 and faster networking. Flashstor Gen 3 appears to merge those two ideas. It keeps the all-NVMe Flashstor format and high-throughput ambitions, but brings back integrated graphics and HDMI output via the Ryzen APU. That matters for users who want a NAS
Content creators who want a compact all-flash NAS with very fast local/direct access options.
Home lab users who want containers, VMs, third-party OS experimentation and high-speed networking in a small chassis.
Plex/media users who were waiting for Flashstor performance with graphics/HDMI back in the mix.
Privacy-focused AI users who like the idea of optional local AI without sending everything to cloud services.