If they were going to get enshittified, they should've been smarter about it to gradually introduce lock-in. The switching cost of going to Jellyfin is almost zero. Did it in an afternoon about a year ago. Ya done goofed, Plex
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Plex has been off limits to me for along time. Just the fact they want to require auth with their central service for something I use for reasons rights holders would love to sue me into third world poverty over (muh Linux ISOs) is enough reason.
Them demanding that auth hook into the server makes me uneasy about what sort of metatdata they are currently, or could exfiltrate later on, should they want to or be demanded to.
Whole thing stinks of willingly being part of a honeypot.
Goodness, how am I supposed to store and stream more entertainment than I could watch in a lifetime now?
I use Plex for audiobooks and TV shows primarily.
The fact that you can't (or at least can't easily) scan library files from Plexamp is utterly insane to me. Especially after they made audio libraries completely unavailable on the regular Plex app.
I'll probably switch to Audiobookshelf or something else down the line.
You can scan from plexdash.
Clients suck on non plex
Moved to Stremio + A debrid service. I’m good.
Stremio
At a glance, it looks like it requires signing up with their service, which means they can track everything I do. No, thanks. I'll stick with Jellyfin.
Serious question. I have been using the free version of plex for years and been happy with it. I have no desire for remote access and I never consume media on my phone. I just use it to watch TV shows and movies in my living room. I don't want anything more from it so I'm fine with the free version. Is there anything else I'm missing out on my not using jellyfin? I've considered it but to me it doesn't seem to be worth the effort to switch if I'm happy with the free Plex. But I'm willing to have my mind changed
It may have very well changed recently or I could be misremembering, but the reason I switched over was being unable to play certain codecs/media types (types of hdr?) over stream while converting on host.... unless I had a subscription.
Utter lunacy to want me to pay to convert on my own machine. I've since swapped to jellyfin, donated, and am happier for it (and the open source part is such an added plus).
For your use case its pretty much identical.
I prefer the plex interface slightly. But id rather use open source
I would say get to know how to use it at least so you can hit the ground running if they ruin Plex for you.
You guys are still using plex? I just make it publicly available on a webserver. Access control? Why would I care, I stole it.
Idk. Maybe you don't want to spend the bandwidth and power on streaming it to a bunch of randoms.
Wireguard, or even just jellyfin with a password
I'm still annoyed that I spent £100 on Plex a few years ago. It seemed like a good investment at the time but I ended up never using it.