FR version is available. Content is displayed in original English for accuracy.
Advertisement
Advertisement
⚡ Community Insights
Discussion Sentiment
73% Positive
Analyzed from 1723 words in the discussion.
Trending Topics
#plex#jellyfin#software#app#better#music#don#own#thing#still

Discussion (53 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews
Picking a tool is a very personal decision, and it depends on one's values and one's use.
And that's fine. If you're not bothered by what others are, cool beans. Good for you.
I worry I over-index on my desire for control but it's just so so nice to have my tools work every day and never break, and never change under me and just always do the thing they are supposed to do.
Sorry cloud providers, but you all burnt (nuked) your bridges and I have zero interest in seeing them rebuilt. I’m more than happy on my own little island!
Tinfoil hatted me would wonder if this might be why they are so desperate to try and ensure local LLM’s never become a thing…
I would abandon Plex completely, but I still haven't found a capable app to remotely stream the 2.5TB of music on my Synology. Their recent price hike a few months ago converted me from a $5/mo Plex Pass customer to a $120 lifetime customer. I sense a new product tier in the works that us lifetime customers won't have access to without shelling out more.
Lots of clients are available to connect with it (it also has a functional web UI). It does not touch your music files, keeping things like star ratings in its database.
https://github.com/navidrome/navidrome
# Clients
https://www.navidrome.org/apps/
I would look at Navidrome. Completely focused on music, and for that application much better than either plex or jellyfin.
https://github.com/navidrome/navidrome
If you use iOS, I'm beta-testing a native Plexamp alternative with ~500 Plex users. Not feature-complete, but daily-driver worthy for listed capabilities. Info and TestFlight link: https://www.reddit.com/r/plexamp/comments/1qel35s/new_invite...
So, now I need to try to install the older Plex app on my phone with Sideloadly, because Plex is more interested in streaming shit to me and trying to be Netflix or Paramount+ than it is in doing the the thing it always did best and that no one else was doing: allowing me to stream things to my own devices from my own storage.
It gets frustrating. At some point, no matter how bad Jellyfin is, it will be better than Plex because Plex is trying to become worse than anything else. I guess I got my Lifetime Pass long enough ago ($75) that I've gotten my money's worth out of it, but goddamn.
900 lbs is 400~ kilograms, but according to the Vizio spec page, the speaker is:
Sound bar Weight w/ Stand: 14 Lbs. Packaging Weight: 15.5 Lbs.
Because they did it wrong. Me looking it up and finding out that they did it wrong doesn't mean I'm wrong.
>you would’ve seen that Plex has a separate, dedicated app for l
I don't want 10,000 fucking icon on my phone screens, having to swipe through 5 of them to find anything. Why do I want this split into two apps? That serves them. Not me. That makes it easier for them to try to become Spotify in one place while trying to be Disney+ in another. Fuck that shit. They're breaking something that wasn't broken.
No one everything's being enshittified. It's because I have to share a planet with losers who not only tolerate it, but cheer it on like stooges.
I wonder what exactly am I missing.
No native app for LG TV, but I have an Android TV box anyway.
I can't say how well it works on Apple devices and other TV brands.
Maybe the way I organized my library intuitively sort of matched Jellyfin's expectations?
I don't buy any (non gaming) software for any other purposes because most of the time the pricing model, licensing model, or lack of platform support is not right for me.
I don't want SaaS for anything because things constantly change (almost always for the worse) from under me. I don't want to have to pay a subscription to play my music, watch my videos, or take my notes.
You do know target adds the cost for their web presence to their cost centre, and you as customer pays for it right?
Or maybe a better way to express my thought: one can work in a paying software job and still dislike "paying for software" where that means a subscription to play local media files.