• tempest@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    I mean Plex definitely has a value add. Around here people will scoff but Plex is far easier to work with for non technical users.

    If you shared your library externally Plex was definitely easier it’s just that they have started to extract value from that which does suck.

    • W98BSoD@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 day ago

      Plexamp is GREAT; I’ve not found another app like it that works with a home hosted music streaming server.

      • jenings@lemmy.world
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        17 hours ago

        If you want to go all the way down the rabbit hole look into unraid and the galaxy of self hosted media clients

    • TwiddleTwaddle@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      2 days ago

      Easier sure, but it comes at the expense of all traffic (even streaming to a device on your local network) going through their servers. If you have an internet outage or their servers go down, you can’t even stream media locally with Plex. No such issues with Jellyfin.

      Edit: apparently my frustrations about this were based on something I set up incorrectly, so +1 point for Plex working locally without internet, -1 point for ease of use/setup if I had this wrong for years without knowing it or finding the fix on my own.

      • mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 days ago

        This is incorrect, bordering on outright FUD. Plex only uses their servers for the initial server discovery. When you sign into Plex, your device basically contacts the central plex discovery server and goes “hey, which servers do I have access to? And where are they located?” Plex’s server then passes that info back to the device, so the device can reach those servers directly. No actual content hits Plex’s servers by default. Hell, Plex wouldn’t want content hitting their servers by default, because it’s a truly astronomical amount of bandwidth that would be required on their end, for no real benefit.

        You can technically use their relay option to bounce the video stream off of their server, but they specifically say that it’s a last-ditch workaround for troubleshooting. Because their relay server is intentionally bandwidth-capped and will throttle your video quality. So the relay is only really meant to be used for troubleshooting and edge cases.

        “Aha! But you need to contact their server to get access even on LAN! So it will stop working when your internet goes out!” You can just configure the device to use a direct connection instead. This will allow you to connect directly to a server on your LAN. No need for their handshake server.

      • TrackinDaKraken@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        You’re not alone. The first time I lost access to my locally-stored content when my internet went out, I searched for a solution. There is, one, but it’s not obvious–or at least wasn’t back when I encountered this problem. I don’t know why it would be the default setup, I can’t think of a good reason, only nefarious ones. It’s one of the reasons I dumped Plex, in spite of having a life-time pass I paid $75 for, I stopped trusting them.