•  Appoxo   ( @Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com ) 
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    2710 months ago

    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…

    •  Aabbcc   ( @Aabbcc@lemm.ee ) 
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      1010 months ago

      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

    • 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.

      • Hey friend,
        the domain is: https://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.

    •  yeehaw   ( @cyberpunk007@lemmy.ca ) OP
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      410 months ago

      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.

    •  Kumatomic   ( @kumatomic@lemmy.dbzer0.com ) 
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      10 months ago

      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.

      • 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.

    •  Darkassassin07   ( @Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca ) 
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      10 months ago

      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)

        •  Darkassassin07   ( @Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca ) 
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          10 months ago

          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.