Resol,
@Resol@lemmy.world avatar

If it doesn’t work like Bandcamp then I’m not using it.

ramjambamalam, (edited )

I was initially skeptical but if they actually sold lossless, Blu-Ray quality rips of videos, I’d pay more than a few bucks per movie or show for that.

brandocorp,

This would be awesome, but I just don’t see it happening this way. They have to work with the copyright holders who set those kinds of terms and who have the majority of the leverage in negotiating those terms. Unfortunately, I don’t see any reason this kind of deal would be made.

The business model is to force consumers to purchase and repurchase the same content over and over. Changing only the format, or distribution method, or platform of consumption. This kind of deal would undercut that business model.

ramjambamalam,

You’re most certainly right, but a pirate can dream…

neo,
@neo@lemmy.comfysnug.space avatar

Same. Doubt they will, but I’m open to being surprised.

Resol,
@Resol@lemmy.world avatar

We can only hope that this is what they do.

Appoxo,
@Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

You know…
For lemmy being so dead set on replacing everything propietary with (F)OSS they are really firm on only using/stayung with Plex and pay a 100$ for their pass instead of things like Jellyfin…

Darkassassin07, (edited )
@Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca avatar

I originally setup Plex and was immediately unhapy with their always online model as well as really poor support on their forums.

Pretty quickly moved to Emby and have been happy since (7 years). It’s not FOSS but it’s not locked down nearly as much as Plex, and they have a focus on keeping your info within your own systems. No telemetry.

I don’t mind paying a bit to support development, especially when they offer lifetime options instead of being stuck with a monthly subscription.

Jellyfin has branched out more into niche features like watch parties, leaaving some stability to be desired. Especially with apps like smart TVs. Emby has focused more on its core reliability across all platforms, comming up with a product that’s nice and stable pretty much everywhere.

Jellyfin was a fork of Emby when Emby went closed source as users kept removing the paywalls for premium features. Development time isn’t free; that’s not sustainable for a fulltime dev. Since, Jellyfin has barely kept up, lacking the resources/funding to really flesh out their code. (hell, ~75% is still embys code AFAIK)

HauntedCupcake,

It would be great if the Jellyfin Devs could have some sort of paid service that just does all the DNS/reverse proxy stuff required for remote access, and charge like £5 a month for it.

They would just have to make it clear that the money is going towards further development, not just for the actual service. And obviously continue to allow others to set things up themselves if desired.

I’d pay for that so quick, it would just be so convenient

Appoxo,
@Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Regarding free dev time: Donations can be made as a means to thabk and compensate the project.

Darkassassin07, (edited )
@Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca avatar

Yeah, but relying on peoples generosity is less than ideal unfortunately…

On the other hand; when you’ve got to pay to use a product, you’re a bit more entitled to its use and support than a free project that gets worked on at the devs leisure. Especially when the developers maintain that same view.

It’s a fine line between securing stable income for your efforts while not limiting the usage of your products. I think Embys developers have done a pretty good job keeping that balance. I’ve certainly never had an issue with the activation and use of premium features, and the licence I bought 7 years ago has held excellent value. I’ve just been waiting on some funds to donate ontop as I feel I’ve gotten more than I’ve paid for.

eternal_peril,

I share Plex with friends

Here, friend. Plex will send you an invite, use it on whatever device you have because it probably supports Plex

I share jellyfin with friends

Now download this app, no that one…no this one. Why does this one not work . What do you mean it doesn’t exist. Now you need my help getting you going…

Sorry, Jellyfin is great if tech people but I run a Plex server so I don’t HAVE to help anyone anymore.

HauntedCupcake,

The problem I have with Plex is that default UI is bloated with recommendations, alternative sources and what might as well be ads. Meaning I need to help less technically literate (and sometimes technically literate) friends set up the UI anyway. Just so that they can actually cut through the piles of bullshit to see my server content.

Plex’s default UI is ruined by it trying to shovel its extra shit onto you constantly, making it a terrible new user experience.

At least with Jellyfin you connect to the server and you’re done. It’s a lot more manual, but the UI is just better and easier to navigate.

I say this as an avid Plex user, mostly due to Jellyfin having somewhat dodgy support for more advanced audio and video codecs

Nyarlathotep,

The problem I have with Plex is that default UI is bloated…

Also an avid Plex user.

The Plex new user experience is absolute garbage. What if you just want to share a family video with your grandma? Someone better be there to do the initial app setup because it is overloaded with nonsense like Discover. Sharing Plex with a normal person? You still need to walk them through setup or they will not find your stuff, and stumble into the ad-supported streams.

Oh, and every client app is kinda different, which is terrible.

I do use and like Plex but man, I wish they would make some changes.

Appoxo,
@Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Hey friend,
the domain is: jellyfin.domain.com

Your credentials are:
Username: Friend
Pw: ***********

To watch search “Jellyfin” on the playstore or visit this link:
Link to playstore
Link to Windows JMP

Have fun.

Sorry but those are at best comfortable excuses of moving dependencies to another platform.

At most you’d need to train them on how to the same as before.

The only issue I’d seen so far were playback issues with non-standard encodings (audio codecs for example) and playback devices unable to work with whats reported…
But this is one of the rare uglies I have seen so far.

neo,
@neo@lemmy.comfysnug.space avatar

no tv app what do you mean no tv app i mean no tv app

you’ve lost them at this point unless you literally do everything for them first

Kbobabob,

Lifetime member here. I’m good with Plex.

newthrowaway20,

I paid for it years ago when it was like $50 mostly because the interface was simple enough for my non tech savvy family to use.

kumatomic, (edited )

Not me. I set up my server last November and tried Plex. It reminded me too much of too many services starting to lose their way. Given recent events it looks like I was right. We use Kodi because my partner prefers it, but I really like Jellyfin myself. It was a learning process but really only took two or three hours with research time to set up. Costs me nothing and I don’t have any ads, upselling, or any other BS that will eventually turn into more extreme attrition.

NuXCOM_90Percent,

Plex is definitely trying to monetize and I am wary of how they will reconcile all of the discount lifetime passes that were sold over the years

But I still think it is “good”. Yes, they are adding in hooks for different services and are technically a service of their own (every month there is a “free” movie they offer that I tell myself I will watch and then I never do). But all of that can pretty easily be hidden if I just want access to my library and the libraries of my friends. Its very much a case where the extra features are not getting in the way of the core functionality.

I have “see if jellyfin is viable” on my todo list and have been checking in for years now. Basically every time I do it is “This looks better than it used to be but X or Y is still a headache”. Hopefully that will change if/when Plex shits the bed. But they haven’t so it isn’t really a concern for me.

Aabbcc,

I’m too lazy to get a DNS name pointed at my home server and setup the reverse proxy to get jellyfin publicly accessible

And then hope that I did it securely

Kusimulkku,

DuckDNS and Caddy are what I use and those were piss easy. But yeah, inertia. If it works and you’re happy with it, why change

qaz, (edited )

You can get a cheap domain (~8 digit .xyz is 0.80$/y) and use cloudflare tunnels. You won’t have to expose your home network and the setup is really easy. You will be dependent on Cloudflare but I feel they’re fairly reliable.

  1. Create a cloudflare account
  2. Buy a .xyz domain (on for example Namecheap) consisting of only digits, it should cost less than a dollar a year of you have the right amount of digits.
  3. Set your domain to the Cloudflare DNS server. (You can find instructions on Cloudflare for this).
  4. Go to zero trust and create a tunnel. This allows you to share traffic from your local device on your domain in the next step. (It shows instructions on how to install it on your server)
  5. Add public hostname and create a subdomain for jellyfish and point it to localhost:JELLYFIN_PORT.

Note: You can also do this for other services you host but I recommend using a VPN to connect to your device / home network instead because it does not require exposing it to the internet.

neo,
@neo@lemmy.comfysnug.space avatar

Do you really hate plex so much that you willingly used cloudflare?

Platform27,

Cloudflare is a decent service, with really good security. Plus, with their tunnelling feature, they’re helping to keep you private. If you just pointed your A record to your IP, that’d be visible to everyone. Instead, your A record is just visible to Cloudflare. Plus it’s handy if you’re using them to forward a bunch of services onto the net. Not to mention all the other security features you can use. DNS records by design, are not private.

cyberpunk007,

I use emby Plex and jellyfin. Plex just started it all so that’s where my library began. It’s clean and everything looks good. It will take me considerable time to migrate off it. I also paid 75$ for it in 2014, so I think that makes my point.

Jellyfin has always been on the back burner as a to-do, because I’m a huge advocate for open source.

EarthBoundMisfit,

Jellyfin is awesome! It does everything I could ask for and has been super stable for myself and a dozen friends and family. Almost all my media is 4k and some version of HDR. My cheap Intel ARC A380 and jellyfin handle everything beautifully. I tried plex but it’s hardware transcoding wasn’t as good with Intel GPU on Linux.

Appoxo,
@Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

How was implementing the A380 as a transcoder?

Am certainly interested it (the series, not this card specifically) in buying it as an accelerator.

EarthBoundMisfit,

Very easy if you’re building a new box. The latest Linux kernel (6 I think) has all the required drivers available, and no encoding limit like Nvidia. The Intel GPUs are pretty great for media transcoding.

Personally I setup an old Dell r720 and stuck the GPU in that. My hypervisor is proxmox and I just run jellyfin as an unprivileged container.

Appoxo,
@Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

If I have the spare funds for a new server, this sounds like a lovely idea!

Thank you :)

EarthBoundMisfit,

Sure thing. My electric rate is pretty cheap though. You may be better off finding a small box with integrated graphics in the CPU. Then add storage separately. Connected NAS or something else.

But I like the Dell servers since they’re so cheap for the value.

Appoxo,
@Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Yeah no. Most likely a spare pc case or sff pc (depending on finacial situation).

jawa21,

Things like this are why I am mostly glad to still be using xbmc on my original hacked Xbox. Not much space and I have to deal with FTP, but it still works a treat.

Nyarlathotep,

My friend, there is retro… And then there is masochism. :)

thoughts3rased,

Hot take: If I get the actual MP4/MKV/whatever, I don’t actually care about this and think it might be a good thing, hell, I might actually purchase a couple movies and TV shows through it.

If it’s just the same “license” that everywhere else gets you, then I ain’t buying shit.

FlavoredButtHair,
@FlavoredButtHair@lemmy.world avatar

For people who purchased lifetime plex pass, what does this mean for them?

thoughts3rased,

Not much really. Plex hasn’t presented this as a normal subscription based streaming service and more of a digital storefront akin to Google Play Movies & TV. The way I’ve always seen it is that Plex Pass was more like a software license since it granted all the features of the Plex software library. Maybe Pass users will get a discount or something.

RootBeerGuy,
@RootBeerGuy@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

Search your feelings, you know the truth.

kumatomic,

Exactly, there’s no way the studios are going to let them sell actual ownership.

jlow,

Yeah, but there is no way in hell they somehow convinced movie studios to let us have drm-free files. It would be amazing but I can’t see it happening.

nybble41,

They could stick to public domain & indie titles. They won’t, but they could.

rickyrigatoni,

If a storefront starts making people pay money for public domain movie files I am becoming a terrorist.

nybble41,

It would be a nominal charge for storage, bandwidth, and indexing. Book stores carry public-domain titles, for profit, and most have no issue with that. You can always procure the same files somewhere else—they are public domain, after all. Those who pay are doing so for the convenience, not because they’re forced to.

rickyrigatoni,

I can’t hear you over the dastardly bubbling of my nefarious cauldron where I am brewing vile elixers.

NuXCOM_90Percent,

I don’t know how it would even be possible with media files (since people know how trivial it is to relocate those) but I would actually be perfectly fine with a “license” if it used something akin to the GoG/GOO DRM model.

For those not aware, the gist of those kinds of DRM is that you authenticate with a server to get access to the file. The file may or may not be sent encrypted and then locally decrypted. After that, there is no DRM until you want a new version and you can copy it anywhere you want.

Unlike most here, I don’t mind buying my media. Hell, I generally prefer it since I don’t care enough to find a private tracker (and am not looking for that smoke on movies/tv…) and like having a proper 4k/hdr/whatever rip with whatever audio tracks I feel like ripping. Same with extras and so forth. With studios increasingly realizing they don’t want physical media to cannibalize their service, we get nonsense of “Well… we might get Andor on blu-ray some day but, until then, enjoy a highly compressed and crushed version of what may be the greatest single season of TV ever made”

Theoretically, the various VOD services avoid that but… you still get the same shitty streamed copy for the vast majority. If I can get a proper 4k release that contains HDR data, actual 5.1 sound, and so forth for a reasonable price? Stick it in my veins!

akilou,

It wouldn’t be so bad if you could buy and actually own

umbrella,
@umbrella@lemmy.ml avatar

🤣🤣

cyberpunk007,

Time to move to jellyfin I guess.

Paddzr,

As soon as they get xbox app that’s not just a fucking browser…

Sure, you might be fine, my 7 year old and wife aren’t. The ui and ux are hot barbage without a mouse. I just want to use my tv remote and simple arrows and for the play/pause button to work.

I paid for plex pass because jellyfin didn’t pass the usability test in our household.

Psychodelic,

Can’t you just hide the paid movies/tv tab? Or is it a principle thing

Is jellyfin better? I’d never heard of it 'til now

cyberpunk007, (edited )

Jellyfin was forked from emby (emby is similar to Plex, jellyfin is open source) in 2018 when emby went closed source, and they implemented sync and remote streaming if I recall correctly.

It’s a principle thing mostly. Plex just keeps ignoring features users want and trying to push some monetization model.

They regularly implement what I’d say most would consider anti features.

For example, I remember the push back on the mandatory “recommended” tab. It’s the first thing you see when navigating to a library. Wow. Neat. Some bean counter at Plex is “recommending” what I should watch on my own library. No thanks.

There was also the fiasco with emailing your friends things you’ve been watching. Just what you want where you store all your legally owned DVDs with your legal streaming rights to your friends.

Then there was also a thing where they began collecting data on your media libraries to their servers.

There’s also mandatory Internet connection if you want to have local users :). Lots of people barked at this and they ignored it and tried to spin it as an ok thing. You cannot have other people in your family have different watched status and stats without connecting to the internet. Oh did your Internet go down? So did Plex. At that point how’s it different than Netflix. Not to mention we’re the ones doing the hosting. It’s in our network. This should not be reliant on an Internet connection.

The list goes on.

It works pretty well and I’ve thus far been too lazy to change, but jellyfin is open source, and doesn’t have evil people behind it.

Chewy7324,

Jellyfin is great and open source. I’ve never tried Plex, but I’ve heard that Plex has apps on more platforms.

Also, I’d recommend checking out Findroid if your on Android. Its UI is native instead of the usual web interface in the official apps. Iirc iOS has a similar project.

gerbler,

Plex is definitely more user friendly. I would like to try Jellyfin again but I host Plex for my parents back home and I don’t want to troubleshoot Jellyfin internationally when I know they can just install Plex and log in on their devices and I don’t have to deal with it.

Definitely different strokes for different folks but I understand Lemmy is very big on FOSS so it’s no surprise Jellyfin has such a positive following here.

Ultimately I’m glad to have options regardless.

Appoxo,
@Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

How is a login screen less user friendly?
Eveny non-technical mother got the hang of it after I explained it to her one time.

Just the playback has some quirks with audio/subs sometimes.

originalucifer,
@originalucifer@moist.catsweat.com avatar

the idea of signing up at plex is somewhat antithetical to a lot of selfhosters.. theres nothing plex is doing that cant be done for free with better software.

Steve,

Its not better, but its worth it for not being dependent on internet

Facebones,

I never messed with Plex but Jellyfin is pretty easy to muss with so it’s definitely worth giving it go.

Jellyfin is FOSS as well, I assume Plex isn’t since it’s doing…all this. lol

Kraven_the_Hunter,

The biggest problem with Plex (I’m a user) is that you need a network connection just to use it with your local media unless you do a little research to figure out how to bypass this. Why is this a problem? You don’t notice it until there’s a network outage and you want to watch something. Or if the Plex servers are glitching. It’s needlessly complicating the process of watching your media.

d00phy,

Not really sure what you’re getting at here. I’ve had a network outage for the past 2 days and was able to watch stuff on my local NAS just fine. I haven’t done anything special to make it do that.

DadVolante,
@DadVolante@sh.itjust.works avatar

Yeah, one of the reasons I love plex is I don’t actually need to be connected to the internet for it to work. Just my home network. All my devices work fine when the internet goes out, which is frequently does during storm season

Auli,

No managed users then? I’ve never had them be able to use their profile when plex is down.

DadVolante,
@DadVolante@sh.itjust.works avatar

Just me.

I’m old and have very few friends, heh. Especially ones who would even know what plex is

Zectivi,

I believe what they’re getting at is an issue if they’re not already authenticated prior to the outage. Then they’d have no access to their media unless they look into the workaround for that beforehand. It has been an issue in the past, especially when Plex’s auth servers go down. I remember plenty of Reddit threads complaining about it.

d00phy,

Ah, makes sense. Thanks.

originalucifer, (edited )
@originalucifer@moist.catsweat.com avatar

if you have to ask someone else to access your own [local] data, youre doing it wrong. ack

pupbiru,

i wouldn’t say wrong… it’s SSO. i have multiple servers on my plex account, and i much prefer to have a single login for all of them than different for every server. it also allows things like login with plex for overseer etc

it’s a trade-off for sure, but i’d argue a very worthwhile one

perhaps you could argue that you should be able to run the auth server yourself, and sure… maybe… but i think that’s the worst of both worlds

stratosfear,

Ehhhhhh. I don’t think anyone expects to be setting up their Plex server with an Internet outage. As long as you have been setup prior and you lose Internet you can still log in with the last local profile you used. It’s not perfect but you’re not locked out. No workaround (at this point in time) is necessary, assuming you’ve already authed and added your server to your “whatever” device.

And ultimately you just keep Kodi for the apocalypse. This complaint about “not being able to access your media” if the internet is out is misleading. Of course you can access your media if the internet is out, it just might not necessarily be with Plex which is ultimately an online service. Sure we can call it a limitation but that’s just nit-picking since most everyone has their Internet up almost all the time, offline does work, and there’s plenty of other ways to access your media.

Kraven_the_Hunter,

Yeah this is pretty much it. When it first happened to me I had no idea and just wrote it off as a glitch. Then it happened again or the Plex servers were out so everyone was talking about it. There should never be a reason for your home media server to need access beyond the local LAN.

WhatAmLemmy,

You need to specifically set it up to work offline. It’s not out of the box. Either the setup guide you followed included that step, or you went out of your way to enable it, and forgot about it. It’s been that way for 5+ years, at the very least.

Auli,

You must have. Plex uses their servers to login and there is a setting to not require authentication when on this subnet.

NarrativeBear,

Could you provide a few examples or point me in the right direction to bypass the always online or call home features.

Currently my Library is shared with a reverse proxy and only accessable through CloudFlare. My firewall and pihole block my Plex server from sending anything to the Plex analytics address. Within Plex settings I have it set that Plex is not accessible online.

Is there anything else that I can do or missed.

Kraven_the_Hunter,

Here’s one article that runs through it, otherwise just search for terms like “plex local network” or “plex local authentication”

howtogeek.com/…/how-to-use-plex-media-server-with…

Auli,

Sure but if the severs are down managed users cannot login.

Platform27, (edited )

Depending on your server, and how you install you might have a bad experience. I’ve had issues where it wasn’t finding the film/series metadata, having plugin issues, and being incredibly slow (slow UI when anything is being done, slow scanning folders, slow loading saved metadata, etc). Jellyfin, like a lot of open source software, feels like jank. The devs know about a lot of issues, but they’re swamped with so much, with this big of a project.

People criticise Plex, rightfully so with some of their bad decisions, but it still works better. For me, Plex runs so much better, and without issues. I won’t be moving away to Jellyfin in the foreseeable future, but I’ll be glad when I am able to.

rambos,

I know plex has some features that jellyfin doesnt, but it was time few years ago, at least for me

Kusimulkku,

Then again, with Jellyfin you don’t have to pay for hardware transcoding. That is the one that really bothered me. It seems insane you’d have to pay to properly utilize your own hardware.

Squizzy,

It’s the app availability, LG TVs don’t have jellyfin which is awkward for me.

Appoxo,
@Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Chromecasts and derivatives etc. exist?

cyberpunk007,

I can cast to my nest speakers and TV’s with Chromecast built in.

deluxeparrot,

There’s an official Jellyfin app in the LG app store.

Squizzy,

I may not have checked in awhile but I could have sworn that walhen I got the TV that was a con of it.

Unreal thank you.

rambos, (edited )

My TV is not even smart. I use 40$ xiaomi tv stick (android 1080p). Its powered from USB port on tv and connects via wifi. Its not the fastest device, but it works just fine Edit: not sure about price anymore, seems like its more like 50$ now, but still cheap IMO

akilou,

Does Jellyfin have a PlexAmp equivalent?

cyberpunk007,

Yes, finamp. I have it installed. I haven’t tried it.

shrugal,

It’s similar in name only though. Plexamp has a lot of great features that this one is missing.

akilou,

play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.unicorn…

I’m gonna hold off switching for as long as possible. This looks like it’s not even close to PlexAmp. I mostly use artist stations and the DJ features. This just looks like it only plays albums or manual playlist.

Z4rK,

It’s coming, a redesign will hopefully hit beta very soon now.

github.com/jmshrv/finamp/issues/220#issuecomment-…

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