Most vendor events are slideware. When we planned Ryzen's first Synology workshop, we set one rule: everyone leaves having done something — restored a file, browsed a surveillance timeline, walked through a real console — not just watched something.
Two sessions, one day
Session one — Synology Solutions Guidance (10am–12pm). A working tour of what a Synology NAS actually does in a Malaysian business beyond “network drive”: file services and permissions done properly, Synology Drive as a private cloud alternative, surveillance on the same box, and where each fits — and doesn't — in a small-business stack.
Session two — Backup Data Solutions (2pm–4pm). The session closest to our hearts: 3-2-1 backup built on Active Backup for Business — PCs, servers, VMs and Microsoft 365 captured on schedule — followed by the part most setups never rehearse: an actual restore, timed, in front of the room.
The demo that made the point
The Surveillance Station demo ran on cameras watching the workshop venue itself, so attendees could scrub back through their own arrival on the timeline. It's one thing to hear “the NAS can be your NVR” — it's another to watch yourself walk in the door twenty minutes earlier.
Why we run these
We're a Synology partner and system integrator — but training our clients isn't marketing to us; it's maintenance. A client who understands their own backup policy opens better tickets, catches problems earlier, and gets more out of hardware they already own. Expect more of these: hands-on, small, and honest about limitations.
Missed this one? The next workshop invitation goes to our clients first — tell us you want a seat. What we build on Synology is on the partner page.
Talk this through with an engineer
Free, technical, and specific to your site — that's the consultation.
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