Plex vs Jellyfin vs Emby? Which Should You Choose?

Which is the Best NAS Media Server Tool – Plex, Emby or Jellyfin

Although modern Network Attached Storage (NAS) devices can be used for a multitude of purposes, there has always been a large percentage of users who buy a NAS from the likes of Synology, QNAP, Asustor and Terramaster (or go full DiY/Open Source and opt for TrueNAS) in order to host their own multimedia server. If you have been out of the loop this last decade or so, then you might not be aware that the standard of media server software and ease of use has evolved incredibly and when it comes to NAS drive multimedia streaming, there are THREE big players in this arena – Plex, Jellyin and Emby. These three platforms (alongside many others, including tools such as Video Station from the NAS brands themselves) have allowed users who own DECADES of digital media (Movies, TV Shows, Music, Photos, eBooks, Comics, etc) to not only access them conveniently remotely from the comfort of their soft/hotel room/commuter train/beach – but also do so with the slick graphical user interface that you would often associate with premium streaming services such as Netflix and Hulu. This is done thanks to massive only databases (such as TheMovieDatabase and IMDb) that mean that your years of multimedia is scanned, sorted, and arranged into searchable titles. It then adds boxart, movie posters, cast lists, trailers, synopsis, trailers, extra content and more. Suddenly your dull breadcrumb ‘file/folder’ pile of media takes on an insane quality level and you have your very own personal Netflix – BUT CRUCIALLY YOU OWN ALL THE MEDIA!! That is the appeal of media server software like Jellyfin, Plex and Emby!

Jellyfin

VS

Plex

VS

Emby

Truly Open Source? Premium Package? The Middle Ground?

Although all three are quite similar on the face of it, all three have appealing design, interface, cost and customization choices that will almost certainly make one of them more suitable for you than the others! All three are supported by the bulk of modern NAS platforms, with via an available app in the brand’s official app center, available via a 3rd party app center (see QNAPClub or Synocommunity for example) or allow you to create a container within the NAS software and run from there, but there are definitely distinctions between all three that you might want to know before taking the plunge on your new multimedia server setup! So, today I want to go through all of the differences between Plex, Emby and Jellyfin media servers and, hopefully, by the end help you decide which is best for you!

Note – A huge thank you to Protektor-Desura for his time breaking down these services and his permission to use his data. You can find out more about his ongoing project HERE.

Plex vs Jellyfin vs Emby on a NAS – What have they ALL got in Common?

Before we go any further, it is worth highlighting the things there are supported by all three of these media server applications. It needs to be underlined that regardless of your specific requirements, Plex, Jellyfin and Emby are all EXCELLENT media server applications and alongside a massive range of client applications to watch/listen/read your multimedia on your devices, they have all grown into platforms that rival most paid subscription streaming services like Prime, Netflix, Disney+, etc. Here is a quick snapshot of all the things that Jellyfin, Emby and Plex have in common:

Plex, Emby and Jellyfin ALL Support the following:

(Note – Some Services for Emby/Plex Require Subscription Services)

  • 1080p/4K Support
  • AV1 Compression Support
  • H.265/HEC Support
  • Metadata Scraping
  • Group Watching
  • Android/iOS Client
  • Amazon Fire TV App
  • Apple TV App
  • Roku App
  • Android TV App
  • Desktop PC/Mac Client
  • Hardware Transcoding
  • Live TV / DVR
  • Multiple Users
  • Offline Downloads
  • Smart Home Integration
  • TV/Movie Tracking

Now, there are a whole bunch of other things that Plex, Emby and Jellfin have in common (the above list would easily be 10x longer if I names them all), so I stuck with the most requested/sought-after features. But what about the things that they don’t have in common? Or those things that are locked behind a subscription/one-off-fee? Let’s begin with the first difference that many users consider the biggest hurdle – the cost of Plex, Emby and Jellyfin.

Plex vs Jellyfin vs Emby on a NAS – Pricing

Now, for many users, the idea that the media server software that they want to use on their NAS costing them MORE money is REALLY annoying! The whole point for many users making the switch AWAY from streaming services (Netflix, HBO Max, etc) is because they wanted to spend that money on the hardware to watch the media they own, as well as ensure that it’s not changed/removed from one money to the next. Now, unfortunately, this is only half the story! The fact is that media platforms such as Jellyfin, Plex and Emby have REAL PEOPLE working o them, as well as continued development (and that is not even factoring in security/stability/feature improvements in the software’s life) that all needs to be subsidized. The NAS brands DO NOT financially support them, the Streaming services actively avoid/discourage them and although users can always donate – the user vs donation ratio is obviously is painfully uneven. Therefore unless these platforms embrace advertisements and/or 3rd party sponsorship (which is a slippery slop for many), the more ambitious platforms need to find ways to fundraise their services in a way that doesn’t hurt casual/low-end users, but pushes the heavier users to support the service.

Here is how Plex, Jellyfin and Emby breakdown their costs:

Server License Fees

Jellyfin

Plex

Emby

Free Option? Yes, Completely Yes, but some services unavailable Yes, but some services Unavailable + Some Client Apps Need One-off payment
Monthly Free

Unlimited Users

Plex Pass

$4.99 (15 devices)

Emby Premiere

$4.99 (25 devices)

Yearly Free

Unlimited Users

Plex Pass

$39.99 (15 devices)

Emby Premiere

$54.00 (25 devices)

Lifetime Free

Unlimited Users

Plex Pass

$119.99 (15 devices)

Emby Premiere

$119.00 (25 devices)

So, IMMEDIATELY Jellyfin looks appealing, RIGHT? It’s totally free for the server application, client tools and (remember the chart above showing what all three support) has most of the same features as Plex and Emby. Although all three have free-to-use options, the ability to use ALL services and client tools is where the subscription services appear. Of the three, Emby works out the tiniest bit more expensive, but actually (when you work it out at the per-user vs cost) it is largely identical to Plex in costs. The main reason that Emby works out the most expensive technically is that although the Emby Premiere subscription is optional, some of the client applications (eg iOS, Android, FireTV, etc) require you to either have an existing Premiere subscription OR pay a one-off fee. Plex allows you to install the app for free on most platforms, but limits the range of supported services that you can use (eg, hardware transcoding, share watch, etc) without a Plex Pass subscription in place. Next, let’s dig deeper into those available features and services available in Emby, Jellyfin and Plex to see what is available, what differs and what is free/paid-for!

Plex vs Jellyfin vs Emby on a NAS – Features, Functions and Supported Formats

Now, as mentioned in the introduction, Emby, Plex and Jellyfin all support a whole bunch of services and features to help you enjoy a wide range of multimedia, in a wide range of formats and on a wide range of devices! But there is definitely some disparity when you dig deeper. Let’s go through the range of supported features of these three applications and see where they start to separate:

Features

Jellyfin

Plex

Emby

License GPL v2 Full Commercial Full Commercial
Client/Server Yes Yes Yes
4K Support Yes Yes Yes
ATSC 3.0 Support
(4K HEVC Main 10 profile at Level 5.2 Main Tier,
HDR, Dolby AC-4, MPEG-H 3D Audio)
No No No
AV1 Support Yes No Yes
Audiobook Support Yes No Yes
Bandwidth Limiting Yes Yes Yes
Camera/Photo Upload No No License
Collections Yes Yes Yes
Comic Book Support Yes No No
Commerical Skip 3rd Party Add-on/Free License No
E-Book Support Yes No No
Favorites and Tags Yes No Yes
Game Support No $2.99/Month Broken
Group Watching SyncPlay/Free Watch Together/License Limited/Free
Hardware Transcoding Yes License License
Internet Radio Support Yes No No
Intro Skipping YesPlugin Yes Yes
LDAP Support Yes No License
Live TV/DVR Support Yes License License
Lyrics No License No
Magazine Support Yes No No
Mobile Media Optimizer No License No
Mobile Sync No License License
Movie Support Yes Yes Yes
Multiple Plugin Repositories Yes No No
Multiple Users Yes License Yes
Music Support Yes Yes Yes
Music Video Support Yes Yes Yes
Offline Media
(Download & Play Offline)
Yes/Free License License
Parent Controls Yes License Yes
Per User Bandwidth Limit Yes/Free License License
Photo Albums Yes License Yes
Plug-in Support Yes No Yes
Podcast Support 3rd Party Add-on/Free No Yes
Recommend & Discover Yes Yes Yes
Remote Login Server Never Yes Yes
Server Backup No Yes License
Server Stats Playback/FreeReports/FreeEmbystat/Free LicenseTautulli/Free YesEmbyStat/Free
Sharing Libraries No Yes No
Simultaneous Login Limits Yes No Yes
Smart Home/Voice Control Alexa/FreeHome Assistant/Free Alexa/LicenseGoogle/Free Alexa/LicenseGoogle/License
Theme Songs and Videos 3rdParty Plugin/Free Yes/Songs only License
TIDAL Music
(Requires Subscription)
3rd Party Add-on/Free License No
Tonemapping CPU No Yes Yes
Tonemapping GPU Yes Yes Yes
Trailers & Extras Yes Yes Yes
Tuner Sharing No No No
TV Episode Support Yes Yes Yes
TV Guide Data Yes/3rdParty Add-on/FreefHDHR/Free License License
Virtual Reality No License No
Video Chapters Metadata DL No No No

Now, Jellyfin is the most open of the three (cough because it’s pure Open Source), and as good as that sounds, it is worth remembering that this does come with a downfall in platform development when compared to the platforms that get user-subsidy via subscription. Jellyfin is the less visually modern of the three (for those that care) and also throws alot of information at you on the server side, whilst not guiding the user as much. This results in a slightly steeper learning curve vs Plex and Emby. Emby also suffers from this a little, but also does a slightly better job of guiding the user through the experience. The main difference here is regarding the extent of open source! Of the three, PLEX is the one that is the closest to ‘the establishment’, it has long since shrugged off it’s free ‘indie’ type image, as it is the closest in design, appearance and presentation to subscription services. This is not necessarily a bad thing, as this results in a premium level of support, development and updates, connections with existing services and just generally a much better-presented platform overall (server-side and client-side) that is more user-friendly and intuitive – exactly what you would expect from the more premium presented/priced package in 2023/2024. However, this also results in the platform being alot more rigid, restricting optional add-ons and packages that are typically ‘unofficial’ (i.e. ones that Plex do not add to the service themselves). Equally, that Development vs Subsidy balance results in ALOT of the more exciting features being locked/restricted behind a Plex Pass subscription. This is initially understandable (again, see previous paragraph about supporting good work), but many users bulk at the idea of paying for a service, when they already paid for their hardware and said software will occasionally intentionally limit that hardware utility behind the subscription. Both Emby and Plex are guilty of this. Let’s talk about Hardware Transcoding!

Plex vs Jellyfin vs Emby on a NAS – Hardware Transcoding

What is Transcoding? Transcoding (also referred to as encoding, decoding and converting in similar means) is when a file is changed in order to be better suited to the destination client device that it will be enjoyed on. Here are some examples of when you might need to take advantage of transcoding:

  • You might own media in a specific compression (the technique used by the media industry to make cinema screen blockbusters into at-home watchable content, among other reasons), such as HEVC/H.265, but not have a licence to play it on your client device, a NAS that supports HEVC or have sufficient client-side hardware/permission locally to convert it
  • You might own 4K versions of your multimedia, but you want to watch it on a mobile device where a 480p or 720p version is much, MUCH more client power/hardware efficient to watch
  • You are on a limited internet/cellular connection (morning commute, hotel, coffee shop, etc) and need a compressed version of a media file streamed
  • Your media might be in an unsupported format (a hugely overlooked factor in audio formats) such as mp4a, FLAC, ACC, etc and needs changing

Transcoding can be done in advance (offline transcoding) or as/when the file is being accessed (known as on-the-fly transcoding) and that later one requires your NAS/Media Server to have sufficient hardware to change the file quickly enough to keep up with organic natural playback (i.e. it takes less than a second to convert/transcode a second of media). Now, you can use software transcoding (i.e the NAS will use raw CPU/System power to change the file, which is less efficient and less effective) or you can use hardware transcoding, which uses specifically available NAS system hardware (graphics card or CPU integrated graphics) to do the job, which is MUCH faster and MUCH MORE efficient. Where Plex and Emby hit a wall is that both platforms have put hardware transcoding support in their premium subscription services Plex Pass and Emby Premiere. This effectively means that the media server software is charging you to use the hardware in your NAS. This upsets quite a few people. Now, in their defence, hardware transcoding does require the software to be adaptive to different graphical hardware, requires time/energy invested in optimizing the software to take advantage of the hardware the best it can and is technically a more specialized media service/function that is not used by everyone – so in a way it makes sense tha this would be one of the optional settings to use as a means to subsidize development in their platform. However, the fact that Hardware Transcoding is available for free in Jellyfin is one of the strongest benefits that users that need this service will observe when comparing Jellyfin, Plex and Emby.

Plex vs Jellyfin vs Emby on a NAS – Supported NAS Hardware & Software Server Platforms

Although Plex, Jellyfin and Emby are all supported on the bulk of NAS platforms, the actual installation of them on NAS devices (from brands such as Synology ,QNAP, WD, Asustor and Terramster) or Custom built NAS servers that run on TrueNAS Core, TrueNAS Scale or UnRAID is not as straight forward from one media server app to the other. Here is how the three media server applications compare with it comes to installing the server-side application for Emby, Plex and Jellyfin:

Server OS

Jellyfin

Plex

Emby

Android No Yes Yes
Asusor No Yes Yes
Docker Yes Yes Yes
FreeBSD No Yes Yes
Linux Yes Yes Yes
MacOS Yes Yes Yes
Netgear ReadyNAS No Yes Yes
Nvidia Shield No Yes Yes
Open Media Vault Yes Yes Yes
QNAP No Yes Yes
Rasberry Pi Yes Yes Yes
Synology Yes Yes Yes
Terra Master No Yes Yes
Thecus No Yes Yes
TrueNAS No (docker supported) Yes Yes
WD My Cloud & My Passport No Yes Yes
Windows Yes Yes Yes

Straight away, you can see that the installation of Plex and Emby on..well..EVERYTHING is supported. Once again, that optional paid subscription model has evidently paid off! Not only is Jellyfin not available as a standalone installer on a large number of platform, but in some cases it can only be installed as a custom-built container application (requiring a container hypervisor such as Docker) and although this is not hugely difficult, it will be dependant on the end user to create it right, as well as the efficiency of the NAS hardware in question to run the container as efficiently as possible. Overall, when it comes to the installation of the server-side application for these three multimedia server applications, Plex and Emby are winning the race! However, this is just the client-side application (i.e the one running the media server on your NAS), what about the support of the client applications for all your devices? Let’s take a look.

Plex vs Jellyfin vs Emby on a NAS – Supported Client Apps & Player Devices

The success of your multimedia server is going to be based on the smoothness of how well your NAS runs the server slide Plex, Emby or Jellyfin application – but also HUGELY dependant on the quality and extent of how well it is supported on the devices that you plan on accessing and enjoying your multimedia (referred to as clients or client-tools). Although all three applications can be accessed via the majority of web browsers (Chrome, Safari, Edge, Mozilla, Opera, etc), the bulk of users want to access their media via their phones, laptops, Smart TVs and streaming boxes such as FireTV and Roku. The range of supported clients and the means/extent of their use is possibly one of the biggest areas of difference between Emby, Plex and Jellyfin that you will find! Here is how they compare:

Clients

Jellyfin

Plex

Emby

Android Free (Google Store)Free (F-Droid Store)Free (Amazon Store)MrMC $2.99 $5 or Server License $5 or Server License
AndroidTV Free Free $5 or Server License
AppleTV FreeInFuse $.99/month, $9.99/yearly, or $74.99/lifetimeMrMC $6.99 Free $5 or Server License
FireTV Free Free $5 or Server License
GoogleDaydream VR No $5 or Server License No
iOS Free $5 or Server License $5 or Server License
Kodi Jellyfin-Kodi/FreeJellycon/Free PlexKodiConnect/Free Embycon/Free
LenovoMirage Solo VR No $5 or Server License No
Linux Free No No
MacOS Free Free $5 or Server License
OculusGo VR No $5 or Server License No
Roku Free Free Free
SamsungGear VR No $5 or Server License No
Sonos DLNA Free DLNA
SonyPlaystation 3 DLNA/WebBrowser Free DLNA/WebBrowser
SonyPlaystation 4 DLNA/WebBrowser Free DLNA/WebBrowser
Tivo DVR Box No Free No
Tizen(Samsung TV) Free/Not in Store Free Free
WebBrowser Free Free Free
WebOS(LG TV) Free Free Free
Windows Free Free $5or Server License
Xbox360 No Free No
XboxOne FreeVideotape/Free Free $5 or Server License

So, let’s break this down a little. In the case of Jellyfin, the application continues to be largely free and available on the bulk of currently used client hardware platforms. I say ‘largely’, because in some cases Jellyfin is not available as a direct client application for those platforms. You will need to use 3rd pary tools/plugins on some client hardware, some apps are glorified browser tabs with a lite GUI on top and some need to have a small fee to maintain their existence on certain app centers. Emby on the other hand is available on more platforms than Jellyfin, however, a large number of those platforms require you to either have an existing Emby Premiere subscription in place in order to download/use them or need you to pay a fee at the app center in order to use them. Finally, we have Plex, which is the one that seems to be the most freely available client application, widely available native installer client app and has much fewer instances of app-payment requirements than Emby.

Now there IS the argument that Emby and Plex need to subsidize these apps being hosted on these app centers, as their continued appearance there and patches being developed over time needs funding. But I do think the availability and potential pricing of these tools is something that is not advertised enough and something that many users do not realize until AFTER they have invested a bunch of time setting up their respective Emby/Plex Media server on their NAS. Jellyfin is clearly the one that is trying to keep itself Free/Open-Source as much as possible, but that comes with limitations on how far they can stretch themselves and the ease of installation on client devices in some cases.

Plex vs Jellyfin vs Emby on a NAS – Conclusion

Choosing between a Jellyfin, Emby and Plex Media Server NAS for your massive multimedia collection is one that going to be about the extent you are going to use it! If you are looking to create a simple media server that is largely accessible everywhere, but has lots of users, is user-friendly on both the server/client side, won’t need all the bells and whistles of a higher-end media enthusiast and you are just looking for a pretty way to enjoy your existing media that compares with premium subscription services – GO FOR PLEX!

If you are looking for a moderately customizable and featured multimedia server that gives you a good balance of control, usability and hardware support, but where the pricing can be a lot more flexible/ad-hoc (i.e one off payment per client of $5) and want the slick GUI, but also the option to customize it and take advantage of a few community add-ons – GO FOR EMBY!

Finally, if you are much more of a multimedia enthusiast, have a wide range of different media formats (i.e Audio, Video, literature and more), want to be able to link a large number of other services/tool and want to take advantage of the full extent of your NAS hardware (but are prepared for a slightly higher learning curve) – GO FOR JELLYFIN!

In summary, here are the pros and cons of each:

Clients

Jellyfin

Plex

Emby

Pros
  • Largely FREE on the client and Server side
  • Supports Many more formats of media
  • Wide range of supported Plugins
  • Live TV / DVR Services are free to add
  • Much more customizable
  • Much more hardware efficient
  • Offline Downloads Supported
  • Easiest to setup on Server/Client side
  • Massive available as a client/server application with widest support
  • Very User Friendly
  • Optional Premium Support/Service options for Users
  • Technically cheaper than Emby
  • One-off app payment vs regular subscription will appeal to some users
  • Phone Camera Upload Support
  • More Customizable than Plex, in add ons and GUI
  • More Client/Server apps available than Jellyfin
  • More media analytical tools than Plex
Cons
  • Steeper learning curve
  • Fewer ready-to-go installer applications on client/server side
  • Lacking some System config backup options vs Plex/Emby
  • Lacks Premium/Paid support/Service option
  • Some Subscription/Paid restrictions
  • Hardware Transcoding PLEX Pass barrier is annoying!
  • Offline Downloads behind Subscription Service
  • Lacks customization and Add ons of Emby/Jellyfin
  • Live TV / DVR Support is behind Subscription
  • Hardware Transcoding behind Subscription
  • Live TV / DVR Support behind Subscription
  • Offline Downloading behind Subscription
  • Not quite as widely available as Plex


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      205 thoughts on “Plex vs Jellyfin vs Emby? Which Should You Choose?

      1. Now that Synology is forcing users to forever remove Video Station in their newest DSM update (7.2.2), this video is more significant than ever before. Thank you for your excellent methodical review!!!
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      2. Great video as always. Like Cameron above, I lost my Internet connection in storms recently, and was seriously under impressed that I could not access my Plex library from the TVs etc. I ended up watching stuff on a laptop direct from the media files, HDMI cable, total lash up.
        My question: is there anyway to allow non authenticated access to Plex so i access it when the Internet is down? My DS920+ is well hidden behind firwalls etc, nothing exposed to the internet. Or is the way out of our next outage to install Jellyfin as a backup path? Plex plays well on the TVs, and I have enough Roku’s to go round for the TVs without a Jellyfin app
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      3. Plex won’t recognise my media properly. It insists some media is not what it is, even with optional folder naming ID and lifetime Plex Pass.
        It crashes regularly when showing Plex ads,requiring restart every time ads are shown.
        Support, for a lifetime Plex Pass holder, is non-existent.

        Emby is much more controllable.
        Jellyfin can’t be installed when Emby is installed without changing ports and breaking some Emby client setup

        Transcoding regularly fails in both Plex and Emby.

        Often I resort to VLC via DLNA which will play all my files with no issues at the cost of having to navigate through folders, but that works.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      4. Appreciate all your work mate. For a few days now I am watching your content to educate myself to make an educated decision which NAS to buy, what to look out for etc.

        Thanks ????
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      5. Great content as always. I think there’s too much emphasis on “you need a plex pass to be comparable”. Lifetime plex pass for 100$ to me kind of makes any argument about a feature being behind that paywall irrelevant. At the end of the day, I think it’s would be a better review to just stick to overall capabilities. I am building by own NAS and have spent $ on hardware and potentially software (unraid or whatever). The cost of plex pass is pretty minimal in the grand scheme. Sure – it’s “one more thing” but it really shouldn’t be a determining factor. If plex doesn’t do something you need or doesn’t do it as well as jellyfin, that should be called out (or visa versa). Just my 2 cents.
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      6. I have a Synology DS-923+ just getting it running. Can you use a Zimaboard for hardware transcoding on Jellyfin and Emmy? I saw a video using Zimaboard with Plex. Love your videos.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      7. I have Emby and do not pay anything. Any of the paid options are not something I need. When I watch a movie on my phone, I watch it at 480p instead of e.g. 4K to save data. No problem ever. I also do not need to pay the app on my Android. So not sure what that 5USD is about. The best is to see if you actually need the paid things. Because it might well be that you do not need to. I know I do not need it.

        The only thing that is a bit of a downer is that I can not download subtitles when I am watching the video, but I can when I go to the file before I start it.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      8. Legally they could discontinue offering the lifetime membership anytime they wanted to, but it would be illegal to discontinue those that already have paid for it. It would also be a class action if they attempted to rename it or substitute it with something above it. As long as they are in business, they have to honor those that have the life time membeship, and even if they sold it or did a merger, they still have to honor it. There is no legal way around it.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      9. im a lifetimeplex user but tbh if i started today i would not mind paying 4GBP a month if the core service and audiobook support was there. remove everything external live whatever.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      10. late to the party. The transcoding part is a load of UTTER rubbish. The commentary states he is comparing “Hardware” transcoding. Plex’s dropdown, as shown, is CPU only transcoding. That is “software” transcoding. Jellyfin’s dropdown is for real hardware transcoding.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      11. I have used Plex for at least 10 years. I have been a lifetime since like the first month. I will admit I still only use it for my own media. I don’t care anything about the live tv or movies. The point of having all of my media digital is to not have to deal with ads. The idea that Amazon is possibly going to start charging to watch Prime Video ad free is making me feel like it may be time to get rid of that. I am not paying $ and then have to deal with ads. I sadly will have to say goodbye to Plex if they put my use of the product behind a pay or ad wall. I feel like I have gotten my monies worth from my lifetime. I wish they would have stuck to what made Plex great, software for watching your own media.
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      12. dont think the lifetime will go for already buyer because every company that had this deal and stop it, they didn’t touch those who buy it.
        i can give few examples from video games.

        if they going to stop it from new buyers i hope they gonna say something like you have 1 month to buy it so those who can would buy and support.
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      13. Plex freezes my TCL Android TV if I try to browse my movies with it.

        It is better than jellyfin in that it feels slightly more refined and for some reason jellyfin can’t look for new subtitle out maybe I don’t know how to use it but that’s an issue I’ve seen.
        jellyfin is more stable on the TCL Android TV though.
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      14. JF is 5 years behind in development. And they are not catching up because there is only couple main-developers that walled off from the “free dev community”. There is PRs open in JF since three years! Nothing is implemented because the Jellyfin-Devs have their own “master-plan” and they sleep most of the time. In my opinion they just use the reference to JF to make their reputation as IT-Consultants bigger through github. It’s is basically abandoned by now unfortunately. I wanted it to succeed very much but in order to progress someone would have to fork it again. They haven’t even managed to remove the references to Emby in JF in all those years. They seem not to understand the code at all. And the very needed update for the database also not coming. Emby has implemented it years ago.
        Also you should read about reputation of Luke, the head-developer of Emby. He is active in the community since a decade and has developed pretty popular application WMC. This guy knows what he is doing. If you are serious about such a media-server you should go definitely with Emby. I am quite sure that on the long run everybody will get to the point of dissatisfaction with JF, especially since important plugins/addons can suddenly stopped from being updated because the maintainers decided to do something else and also because customization is pretty bad.
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      15. I tryed jellyfin, and i can’t access to it outside my home and the help is non-existent. Did emby is the same when trying to configure remote access to my content? Did i have to configure third-party software or reverse proxy, dyndns or anything else?
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      16. If they were to suspend my lifetime Plexpass or begin to “nickel and dime” me for services I would move on. They can save money by not giving me all that Plex streaming content I don’t use. I just use the core media server features.
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      17. About time plex died , there apps suck arse , there to interested in there streaming adds , then to fix there backend , switched to jellyfin and its is 100% better less ram usage , less cpu , and will pickup older gpus for transcode , and dosent force me to pay to use my own gpu
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      18. Imho the lifetime pass was always a bad idea. Just charge $20 a year so they have recurring revenue.

        Plex is an enthusiast thing and they would have saturated their market base and can’t grow more other than waiting for kids to get to a certain age when they move out etc so they get their own stuff.
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      19. I’ve had PLEX since there were just starting. Paid for the Lifetime membership hoping for the best. Unfortunately, there are MANY ISSUES with the service and there is NO TECH SUPPORT! PLEX’s idea of tech support is to LEAVE THEIR PROBLEMS TO OTHER USERS TO TRY AND FIGURE OUT PLEX’S PROBLEMS WITH WORK-AROUND FIXES. There is NO direct line for TECH SUPPORT, ZERO, ZIP, NADA!
        You have to post your problems to “THE COMMUNITY” and HOPE someone else has found a way to correct the same issues you are having OR EVEN READS YOUR POST. If you try to send a email to them for help you get a robotic reply with a link that does NOT WORK to submit your question to “THE COMMUNITY”. TOTALLY USELESS! I have spent, now, over 6 hrs looking for a fix for my latest problem.
        If you get PLEX, YOU ARE ON YOUR OWN. Don’t expect help from them at all. Buyer beware!
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      20. Plex Wiki shows they had 100 employees in 2019. So instead of saying 20% of them have been laid off, why not be realistic? They laid off 20 people. That’s all. But I guess 20% seems more scary than just 20 people.
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      21. I have a Lifetime Pass but I really don’t use it anyway. My Plex use is almost exclusively to play and manage my extensive music collection. Hardware transcoding isn’t required for music and I think that their streaming media is just junk that isn’t worth watching. As it happens, just three days ago I fired up a Jellyfin server. I just pointed it to the NAS where my music is stored and away it went.

        I did this because streaming Plex to various devices in my home just kept crashing. Sometimes the app (whether on phone, Arylic or TV) would just stop. The UI is fine, but the player/s just stop and close. Other times the players would throw errors saying that the media type could not be transcoded, but the very next time you play that track it worked fine. Casting to the TV would spuriously just stop or crash.

        Before the Plex Fanbois jump in, I did extensive fault finding – I reinstalled my NAS on different hardware with different storage. I tried Plex directly installed on my NAS. I installed the Plex server on each physical server I have in my home (I have four.) I tried a dedicated bare-metal install. I changed network switches and cables, stopped using it over WiFi to devices (such as the TVs) that also had an ethernet connection that I could use, turned off all other traffic on the network so that only Plex was using it and it still did all of the things mentioned previously.

        Jellyfin has worked flawlessly, so that rules out problems with my infrastructure. The only thing is that the Jellyfin app and PC UI suck, especially when it comes to creating playlists, so I lashed out and paid for the Yatse app, which also works flawlessly and has halfway decent playlist management.

        Honestly, I’ve mentally written off the money I spent on the Lifetime Pass and will probably never use Plex again.
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      22. If they cancel what I paid for and expect me to pay more, I’ll drop them instantly for Jelly, which means that no longer will I be pushing people to buy the mobile app to have access to my Plex. If they grandfather my lifetime purchase, fine. A contract was signed.

        The amount of revenue they would lose from people no longer having others buy the app would, IMHO, doom Plex.
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      23. Plex should have focused on making their product reliable. They lost market share and the community gave life to Emby and Jellyfin because it shined way above Plex because “it just worked”.
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      24. Heavily focused on lower income people is a losing prop. People that have the money …don’t have the time. People that have the time…don’t have the money. The idea that people sensitive to milking a Plex Pass for all that it’s worth in conjunction advertising to people that have already shown they don’t have the desire to spend the disposable income on the stuff you’re advertising was a poor one from the start.
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      25. I will also leave when lifetime is useless. But if features are added like emulating retrogames, dvb-c/s tuners, or direct add and play other streaming services in the same interface, I will gladly pay another lifetime subscription for these added features
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      26. I’ve honestly never understood how Plex could survive with one-time purchases and providing lifetime updates for free. I know everyone wants that, but it’s not a sustainable business model without another revenue stream such as through advertising or selling other services with recurring revenue streams. Consider that most streaming services are heavily losing money, it’s a tough business to be in. People say JellyFin, and I’ve tried it, but it honestly sucks and has a long way to go to reach Plex’s polish and usability. With Plex I’d be perfectly happy paying some annual subscription fee just like every other piece of software these days. If it gives them the money to continue developing, adding features, etc., then that’s a good way to go. Sorry, but I don’t believe in the “I’m entitled to free stuff” rabble rabble.
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      27. I still don’t understand why you push Plex or jelly, embie….. Dsvideo is the exact same thing. I’ve been using it exclusively since 2012. All devices are supported and when the internet goes down I still have my intranet.
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      28. If Plex dares to put advertisements during MY media playback I will quit “with prejudice”.
        I do not share my media with anyone outside of my home. I experimented with watching/listening to my media remotely but I have no real need to use Plex remotely.
        I bought a Lifetime Plex Pass after just two months of use. I was kind of surprised that Plex would offer a “Lifetime” deal.
        If it turns out that Plex wants some more money from me they will have to offer some incentives such as good discounts on long term plans (5 and 10 year) and/or useful new features.

        I have a PC running Windows as my Plex server and I use a Roku TV as my primary Plex player and a Windows PC as secondary and an Google Pixel phone as tertiary player. I don’t ever foresee using a NAS as a server, so if Plex wants to eventually drop support for older platforms I don’t care too much, sorry.
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      29. Plex vs Emby —- Emby easily my new fav, Plex has lost its way, used to be just a good media server. If I want all that other content, I’d get a ROKU box. JMHO
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      30. Wouldn’t be surprised if they limit the “sharing” feature, because people building a “sharing business” ontop of that – or make it an additional monthly fee if you exceed a certain users you are sharing with.
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      31. A wordplay of “lifetime products”. Its not a lifetime of user actually, but lifetime of service/program and its support/development may be stopped at any moment. In this case “lifetime” license owner stays on program/service without support or on current version without future updates (best scenario). Nice word – lifetime, but too many thing may be hidden under it, so license agreement not such a bad thing to read when you buying something virtual.
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      32. They’re spending too much on non-core components. Changing the terms of our lifetime pass to fund those developments is something I’m not up to paying for.
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      33. I find Synology’s own free video player and organiser that comes with every one of their Nas units perfectly acceptable. Why would I want to pay? I am getting fed up with software companies and their high pricing. And I’m sure I’m not alone. It’s just a matter of time before people turn to the freebies.
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      34. Um, lifetime means lifetime. Nobody told them to offer it, they chose to. If they pull the rug from underneath that I’m gone. Same day. It’s ridiculous to be “okay with it”.
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      35. On their responsiveness and communication with the community, it’s rare to see such snarky and defensive comments from a company’s official representatives to its paying customers on legitimate issues. I’ve been shocked at how rude they can be to people (including myself). That alone has me wanting to replace them. Who knows if it’s had an impact on their bottom line but it can’t be helping.
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      36. As one of those early lifetime adopters I’d be okay with paying more for a platform centered more on core functionality. Like an scaling tier for sharing to more people. Or the ability to pay a premium to extend some pass features to unmanaged users.
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      37. Maybe they should invite Elon over to take a look, he seems to have a knack for removing dead weight. Perhaps PLEX could then deliver on their core product a little better.
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      38. Ive had Plex for a couple years now. Pay yearly. Its mostly for home use, and no streaming outside of the home and only one Roku and tv using it. Thus, i dont need a ton of ‘features’ i dont use. However, i would be upset if i lost some of the current plex pass features and was told i had to now pay more for them. I’m not sure what else to use other than Plex for my home-movie theater. Currently im running 4 HD’s totalling 38TB of movies.
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      39. If they take away the Lifetime pass, why would I trust any other service pass subscription that they offer? They are unable to keep their word so better to find other services.
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      40. No. If you purchased a LIFETIME pass, you are entitled to a lifetime as promised. This is the common scenario where a company does a thing and does it well. They’re making money, everything’s good. But they want MORE money. They want to flip into the ad revenue game.

        People are already rebelling against all the platforms and the ad takeovers. Piracy is at an all time high! People do not want to pay for a service and have to watch ads!

        Don’t get me started on how YouTube charges you an extra 4.95 just to move from 720p low bitrate streaming to 1080p. It’s all money grubbing and this same tug of war between businesses and users has been happening in waves over the past two decades.
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      41. If its laying off people for crap like games integration or other service integration I’m fine with that. But if they are further shitting on the core competence of Plex: namely playing freaking video and processing metadata…..WTF.
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      42. I only just got the lifetime pass. Barely even put it to use. I don’t believe its simply ok for any company to offer a lifetime pass and then back out of it. If it’s not sustainable, they shouldn’t be allowed to advertise it. That’s false advertising. And from what I’ve seen that happens to other companies that do this, it either starts the death spiral or accelerates it. If they remove it as an option, that’s fine, but for every person that purchased a LIFETIME pass, they need to uphold that.
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      43. I bought the lifetime pass long enough ego that it was outrageously cheap compared to what they sell it for now, and long enough that many years ago I bought some Plex merch because I felt bad about how much use I was getting with them getting no money. I wouldn’t blame them for doing something to move regular users to an ongoing revenue stream.

        I’m sure plenty of people will pitch and moan about it, but if you want Plex at all then the company needs to survive…
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      44. Not sure how useful any of this information you’re speculating on really is. Plex is in a competitive space and obviously needs to make revenue to survive.
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      45. its gonna piss me off if they decide to cancel the lifetime pass as a lifetime sub ive just got it like in december 2022 i think or in early 2023 either way i just got it! and like 2 years ago i had unlocked my phone app prior to that id be really pissed at my wasted investment
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      46. Although this is not postive or good news. i wouldnt really panic that much.I work for a tech company in the US and they just release 20% of the workstaff so they can boost profits.. That is all it is about. boosting profits
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      47. This was no doubt brought on by the senseless venture into live channels/streaming. Absolutely stupid & useless. Did ANYONE – a single, solitary person – ever ask for this?
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      48. I just hope they grandfather the lifetime PlexPass to not alienate the current user base. An extra model could be that additional enhancements ON TOP OF PlexPass could be a higher tier subscription model though. EG. New decoding updates for 4k direct streaming etc might require a subscription to maintain.
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      49. I would suspect that they need to honor the existing lifetime customers or face a lawsuit.
        They can remove the lifetime pass for any new customers but would need to either refund or honor the exisitng lifetime subscribers.
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      50. Plex is in a dangerous environment of steaming services that do NOT want civilians to own their content. We’re back at the Napster and iTunes legal issues, what does an individual own. Plex was one of the ways people could guarantee we had a digital copy of the content we purchased, when streaming services want people to believe they can remove the content they own, just because they have a contract issue with the current IP owner. We’ll have to wait for another lawsuit and Court Judgement to guarantee people lifetime own digital content purchased, when some services close or can’t afford to keep all the content available on their server.
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      51. I think this story is overblown every tech company is laying off employees including Google, Microsoft and Facebook. Plex has clearly tried to avoid these layoffs since they have come fairly late. Most tech companies hired up too many staff when covid hit and there was a huge surge in popularity for things like Plex. Now we’re hitting a recession and companies have to tighten their belts as users do the same and cancel their subscriptions. I’m not worried about Plex at the end of the day they could stop adding new features to Plex and it does what I need right now.
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      52. HELP! My friend, so after buying a Qnap NAS based on your awesome review. I can’t find an answer. My QNAP is in my office behind a hard-firewall with its own VPN login from the outside. I can reach the NAS via myqnapcloud via browser, but Once I’m inside the office network through VPN, I can’t “discover” the nas in the office… What am I doing wrong! I just want to setup the Qnap so it is findable with my mac while I’m inside the office network… any helpful videos? I don’t know if I have to setup a domain controller? #lostintheqnapsea
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      53. I can’t see a problem stopping sales of “lifetime” pass – but if you sell it you better deliver – end of lifetime means you have died. Companies should not sell it if they don’t mean it – and they could have stopped selling it a long time ago.
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      54. Ive tried watching some of the “free” stuff that plex offers and the ad interruptions are atrocious. Every 20-ish minutes i would have to watch 6-8 unskippable ads 15-30 seconds each. And if you were using Plex’s ‘watch together’ feature it would be out of sync, so one person would be forced to watch the ads while everyone waited, then the ads would start over for someone else in the party and then continue down the line until the ads had played separately for everyone. A watch party of 6 or more people would have upwards of a 10 minute break in the content every 20-30 minutes. Im not against Plex having and ad supported tier of service but it really needs to be streamlined and better optimized
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      55. Always paid monthly and have been happy. I use both Plex and Emby at the same, monthly on both, both have pros and cons. Hopefully they come out the other end ok. Have had thousands of hours of use out of Plex. I just dont see why they are bothering with the Streaming side.
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      56. I’m a lifetime Pass holder paid for it several years ago. Anyone think any changes made will also affect people who have already paid, or mainly just new ones wanting to pay going forward. Wanted to edit and add that I run Plex Media Server on an iMac, and the main clients are a Roku, Apple TV, and a Shield TV. Not into mobile Plex use. Also, if Plex goes away I have all my physical media I can go back to in the event Plex stops working.
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      57. Having used Kodi for a good few years, I tentatively moved to Plex around 4 years ago and I found it to be much better, smoother and prettier than Kodi. Kodi has unfortunately become a clunky and sometimes aggravating experience, so hearing this news regarding Plex is concerning.
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      58. Yea, Lifetime pass should be grandfathered for anyone who already has it. If they want to change it going forward, so be it. This is the best way to retain your loyal customer base, yet still obtain funding for any new users. I would be out as well if they drop it.
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      59. Those saying they will step away from the platform if the lifetime pass is watered down just seem stupid. You have already paid and more than likely have gotten years of free service. I was an early adopter so while i would be sad to see it go away or watered down it was a ridiculous value less than a dollar a year. Now i would look elsewhere if it gets changed to where adds are introduced to my personal content. Haven’t seen anything suggesting this but that is something that would push me away.
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      60. I wish Plex would focus on what they are good at, media management, I’ve never once used their streaming stuff and don’t plan to. They should focus on making it the best media management, they way they started. I’d be willing to pay monthly (even as a lifetime user myself) because I love the service so much, but I would have to get something meaningful and worthwhile out of that.
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      61. I nearly fell off my chair…. they had 178 employees and $50m of revenue and they can’t make a profit? This is typical corporate greed. Loading the company up with debt to boost returns and then saying they haven’t any money at the same time as making users lives worse with ads. I moved to Jellyfin a while ago and yes it isn’t as friendly as Plex, it’s more difficult to have it working remotely but to be honest, I took the opportunity to take my server private (Plex can no longer see what content I have) and used Infuse to handle downloading to apple TV & iPad.
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      62. Must be nice to have bought a Plex Lifetime years ago. I only purchased it for regular price less than a year ago. I’d be irate if they walked away from it. I’ve used Jellyfin prior to Plex, and it’s just not as good to use. Such is life, but what a bummer if anything were to happen. The mentioned things are 100% hypothetical in this video and is just creating type. Lets see what actually happens in the coming months.
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      63. The Plex team is a bunch of arrogant idiots. They refuse to listen to their users over even the most basic of annoyances. I quit using Plex after finding out that even after thousands of people asked to hide the recommended tab, they refuse to allow their users customize that aspect of Plex for no reason other than arrogance and supposedly knowing better than their users. Rest in piss won’t be missed. I use Infuse now instead.
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      64. I stopped using Plex quite a while ago. They just got too bloated with too many features that I didn’t want and in my opinion, they lost their ability to create a nice intuitive user interface.

        As far as loosing a lifetime service, I lost that with another product and since then I’ve been staying sensible with just paying as I go.
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      65. When I bought my lifetime PlexPass, I did it to (as one of their suggested reasons) “show my support”. I don’t use their video streaming and have no need for it. I mainly use it to play my stored music collection, all rips of my old CD library. I wish the Alexa (Echo) skill worked better and I wish they would add a player for the Google Nest Mini. Maybe I need to look at JellyFin.
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      66. For a good example of companies ending their “Lifetime” passes you only have to take a look at Filmora.
        They did exactly that.
        They experienced a major blowback from their customers, including those who didn’t have a “Lifetime” pass.
        Filmora destroyed all trust in their customer base.
        Many decided to make the leap to Davinci Resolve, a free and top quality alternative, that offers a paid version with additional features if desired.

        It should serve as a very good lesson in how NOT to treat your customer base.
        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bm90xW40c3A

        Will Plex learn from this?
        Who knows.
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      67. Gradually changing everything to Jellyfin on my system… As you say, I just want something to watch my films. Shame really, because I have used Plex for so many years now. It just seems to be getting a bit too intrusive.
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      68. I have containers for Plex, Jellyfin, and Emby running alongside one another all pointed at the same media library so I can compare them in real time. I am a lifetime Plex pass holder, but have not bought a lifetime pass for Emby. Jellyfin is basically the only one I use these days, so if Plex wants to dig its own grave, more power to them. There’s no way in hell I would have paid for a lifetime Plex pass if Jellyfin in its current form existeda t the time and I had been aware of it, so there’s certainly no way I’d give them additional money.
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      69. If you think that Plex is free, try simply putting in a wrong gateway address as a test. As soon as the Plex service can’t reach “their” servers the product is dead. I can see the NAS “my” movies are sitting on, I can ping the NAS “my” movies are siting on, I can access everything else on the NAS “my movies” are sitting on, I just can’t access the Plex service on the NAS “my” movies are sitting on. If this is what you consider free then lets talk, I have some deals for you. Because of this I have been moving over to Jellyfin. While not perfect and certainly lacking some of what I got used to with Plex, I can at least access “my ” content.
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      70. As a Lifetime PlexPass user, I will sadly have to leave if they decide to take away features or put them behind an additional paywall. Hoping this worst case scenario is avoided.
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      71. They can indeed legally cancel the lifetime subscription. “A perpetual subscription that shall remain in effect for so long as Plex offers the Plex solution or until it is canceled by you in accordance with the Terms of Service.”
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      72. I don’t think taking away or watering down the lifetime pass would be a good move for them. If this happens I would go elsewhere, and as a consequence I would also cease recommending the product. A lack of positive recommendations never does any product any good and I image plenty of others would feel the same.
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      73. I’ve had a lifetime plexpass since 2015. I didn’t need to but I wanted to support them. I currently have plex installed on my Synology 3617xs. I don’t stream outside of the home , if Plex wanted to try to monitize what I already have I would just revert to synology video station . I don’t use plex for anything else but local streaming, I do use freeve, Tubi and Pluto but Plex seems to be more redundant so I just don’t use it for that.
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      74. What sucks with plex is codec support. Dolby Vision, DTS-HD, and TrueHD. It also transcodes in x264 instead of hevc which pretty much everything supports natively now days. I do a lot of streaming in hotels (doing it now) and the image quality with hevc would be better on this limited bandwidth.
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      75. My decision to switch from Plex would be: does it have season-specific special features for TV Shows? Does it have multiple airdates per country? (I have foreign versions of US shows that aired on a different date and want to preserve that). Does it have an aired today category/pivot on the recommended screen? Does it allow me to create my own custom channels and schedule shows so my wife can watch all her Jane Austen stuff on a channel and I can watch Star Trek on my own Star Trek channel? Does it allow movie pre-rolls dependent on various criteria (holiday, season, date, genre, series, etc.)? If Emby or Jellyfin could do that, I might switch
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      76. The big problem with Jellyfin is that you have to jump though so many hoops in order to download it which makes it really hard, You have a great step by step guide on how to install Jellyfin on Synology. Emby is just easier to use and setup as compared to jellyfin
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      77. Big JellyFin fan here. Love it. Once Plex started forcing me to “login” to their app I bailed. Prefer staying offline and only connecting to my LAN so everything is well fortified.
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      78. The only things Jellyfin don’t support are niche and basically irrelevant to your weird uncle.

        Jellyfin supports ISO. Plex arrogantly refuses to. End of discussion for me.
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      79. Thank you for the time you have put into these comparisons. I have had a lifetime Plex pass for over 10 years, but switched to Jellyfin two months ago. Maybe my observations will help someone, sorry if it gets a bit wordy..

        First, Plex is spending their time working on adding streaming services. For the purposes of a self hosted media streaming application, those are clutter (my opinion). Each update pushed my personal folders back off the main page, behind these ad supported streaming services, requiring me to set them up again. Second, Plex is constantly “phoning home”. Set up a Pi-Hole and just see how many connections Plex is constantly making even when the server is sitting there idle. Third, if you are in an area where you sometimes lose internet access, and someone tries to switch users.. you can’t connect to the server from that device until internet access is restored. That last one was the spark that made me decide to switch. Lines got damaged last winter and it took almost a week to get our home internet back up. By the end of that time none of our devices could access the server. Seemed kind of pointless to have a self hosted media server you can’t connect to without internet access. Jellyfin handles user authentication locally, so if you can see the server on the network you can authenticate.

        From the server side, Plex is more refined. That is to be expected from a paid app, but it is surprising how good Jellyfin is. Transcoding is easier to set up in Plex, but if you have the space you can do the transcoding in advance for the devices you intend to use and that’s no longer an issue (which is what I do). Plex is also more tolerant when setting up Metadata.. if you inadvertently name a folder “Season Two” instead of “Season 2” Plex didn’t seem to notice, but Jellyfin absolutely got lost and I had to correct a lot of those kinds of errors. I didn’t find either of the servers difficult to manage, but you definitely need to be more aware and intentional when setting up Jellyfin.

        The user experience in Jellyfin seems much less cluttered and substantially more responsive. Whether on a Roku or a tablet the Jellyfin app opens nearly instantly, whereas the Plex app takes a few seconds. This isn’t something that was troubling in Plex, it takes about the same amount of time to open the Plex app as any other streaming app.. but now I recognize that time delay is because of the offsite connection Plex makes. Jellyfin opens more quickly because everything happens on the local network. I have also noticed that Jellyfin seems to do a better job bookmarking where you are in a movie or series. In Plex I always had to remember where I was in a series because it would get stuck from time to time. Jellyfin will remember, user by user, where someone is and return to that spot.

        I don’t think either one is difficult to set up or manage. I honestly expected less from Jellyfin, being an open source project, but was very pleasantly surprised. There are a few services it doesn’t offer or do as well, such as music management and streaming, but I didn’t really take advantage of those in Plex so their loss wasn’t a big deal to me. If all you want to do is stream your personal video collection on your own network Jellyfin is the way to go in my opinion.
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      80. Yep would not touch Plex with a barge pole, jus too intrusive, nosy and if I understand right needs Internet access to function. Happily paid what worked out to be £99 GBP for lifetime. It is a bit annoying that have to pay for premiere to watch on iOS and Android but I would not say the cost of premium is that bad if paying for lifetime. Jellyfin needs docker on Synology which kind of puts me off a bit.
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      81. I’m still a Plex user (with liftetime I got on sale a lonnng time ago) but slowly starting to explore Jellyfin. Setting one up to slowly test it out. Plex has been slow to roll out some things and seem to be focused on the wrong features for me. Example plex still doesn’t work with latest over the air codec but seems Jellyfin might be able to work with some tweaking. Without any research video is already working, just not audio.
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      82. I’ve used Emby for about three years, and while the server is competent, the clients have their problems. The version for Android TV, in addition to being paid, had a horribly optimized interface. I never considered paying for premiere because my NAS didn’t have the capabilities to take advantage of the extra features of the subscription. When I changed my NAS and it had such capabilities, I realized that it wasn’t worth paying for the only feature I wanted to use, transcoding. So I opted for Jellyfin. So far I’m finding him superior to Emby. Transcoding works fine and clients are better optimized. My only gripe is with the subtitles. Advanced options are only available when I choose another player (default is ExoPlayer) and subtitle options don’t always work well. Strangely, the Android mobile client works perfectly.
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      83. Great video. I have a Qnap Nas, and I have used all 3 of these applications. For me Emby is my favorite. I am a person who loves customization. I want to visually change as much as I can, and craft it the way I want it. I loved Plex, but Emby exceeded my expectations of available customizations. For that reason I don’t mind paying the price for premiere. Just like a lot of services, and applications, it comes down to what your wants or needs are. All 3 of these are good, but for me Emby is my number one.
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      84. I Run Jellyfin on Truenas Scale, My use case was “the internet is down” streaming. Something that is kinda hard with Plex’s must-phone-home even for local use made it less than ideal in my use case. I have no one outside my house that I will stream to, so why pay for that.
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      85. Accessing your own hardware (hw acceleration) is a bit of a moot point (around 26min mark). Every application uses your hardware in some way, so whenever you pay for an application, you’re in a way paying to access your hardware (in some custom, specific way). In case of plex and hw accelleration, you’re not really paying to access your hardware (it’s not like they’re actively blocking that on free tier) but for (as you have said) dev time to integrate that hardware capability into plex. It is strong leverage to get people to get the license though. Great and informative video, thnx!
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      86. As soon as I bought my NAS I adopted Plex but quickly abandoned it. It couldn’t find my non-English content well and it rarely recognized my subtitle files. In addition to the constant connection problems. I migrated to Emby, which was lighter, found the correct data and recognized my subtitles. But it still presented a problem: some clients were horrible. The Android TV client, in addition to being paid for, did not work properly and the plugin for Kodi was deficient. I recently decided to try Jellyfin and, so far, more joy than sadness. There are still some problems. Notifications, which worked perfectly well on Emby, require a little more effort to work properly. Overall I’m happier using it than I was using the others.
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      87. I have a Qnap nas mainly for backup and media streaming with Plex.
        I have a lot of dvd’s that i want to backup to my Qnap.
        The problem is that converting them from a dvd to mp4 takes a lot of time.
        Is there a way to play a copy of the VIDEO_TS folder of a dvd on my Qnap nas?
        Can i copy the VIDEO_TS folder to my Qnap nas and convert it on my nas to mp4, just like “Transcoding” in “Multimedia Console”?
        This way i don’t have to use my computer for transcoding and let my nas do the work.

        Thank you
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      88. Great video! In my opinion, to each their own. Each of these platforms are targeted to different user group. You have the group that love to ticker and put in the extra work and do customization and smile when things work. Then you have the group the just wants to install something, do a simple user friendly setup and things just work regardless of the fee. I am a Plex user for the past 6 years. I use my 8-bay Synology as the file server and I have a PC with a P2000 Quadro for transcoding. Most of the users a share library with are of the older age group that’s not tech savvy. So sending and invite and just walking through the setup on the phone is simple. When I go on vacation, I can just connect to Plex on a smart tv and just start watching, I can log out when am done. I am not bashing Jellyfin or Emby, they are good, but it’s not suitable for me.
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      89. Thank you for your truly excellent video. For me, not being 100% free is a dealbreaker, so I would go with Jellyfin over Plex in a heartbeat. I am actually using Synology Video Station right now, and I am quite happy with it, as I really don’t feel the need any additional bells and whistles. Perhaps I will consider switching to Jellyfin at some future time.
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      90. Plex have been very good for some years, but lately they move further and further away from a “home” Media server to a Streaming service, and hiding to many things behind their Plex Pass. (I have been using Plex for many years, but would not recommend Plex as a frist choice. Mainly for the insane slow to implement “new” standards (codex, file formats, Tags etc)and also unwillingness to listen to their users.
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      91. Great summary. I think one thing missing for me in the comparison blog though is the audio player. I’m trying to move from Plex to Jellyfin, but I’m stuck on there not being a viable equivalent of PlexAmp. This is important to me because I mainly listen to music in the car, so there needs to be a client that works with Android Auto. PlexAmp is pretty slick, and gives you your own private Spotify type experience. Also, are you able to do a guide of adding Live TV (TV tuner cards) support to a Synology NAS Jellyfin server sometime? And maybe how to tell if your NAS is capable of hardware transcoding. Thanks!
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      92. As far as I know, neither of these are fully supported in DSM 7.1.1 – Plex is a Beta and Jellyfin is a community app, that comes with a bunch of warnings/waivers.
        I’m a bit risk averse and will wait for DSM 7.2 and see what is supported before I potentially risk all my data just to stream a DVD that I can put in a machine.
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      93. I use Emby running in Docker on a DS920+. I was wondering if there’s anyway to make use of the 2 lans and have Emby only running on lan 2, whilst everything else runs on lan 1? Can this be done? Video idea maybe??
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      94. I used plex for the better part of a year without complaint. My experience with it was finally soured when I got a nice OLED 4k tv, and I played a 4k movie via plex. I tried to turn on subtitles, and plex said I needed to pay to enable hardware transcoding if I wanted subs. Imagine you have a service running on your own hardware – you’re paying for the silicon and the power – but you need to pay someone to unlock a feature that you yourself are going to serve on your own server. That’s like ordering a pizza, but then it shows up and you have to put it together and cook it yourself. I’ll do that, I’ll cook it myself, but I don’t want to pay someone for the right.
        I also ran into a situation where I had no internet, but plex required an internet connection before I could start the server. I switched to Jellyfin later that week. If you like plex, and you paid for it, and you’re happy with it, then there’s no reason to leave. However if you value running a service that’s actually yours (one of the main reasons many of us got into home networking) with no asterisks, then its Jellyfin; every day.
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      95. i use plex now but have issues with the scrobbler as it will skip ffw 10min only. no back. which makes not spoiling movies suck if you want to pause. it also goes fwd 10 even if you hit back. Don’t know if it’s my remote but it’s annoying. i now have plex and like the visuals but usually actually watch longer movies i might have to pause on the shield tv vlc app. Tried emby for music it was great till it broke. It’s a major pain to configure the music libraries and it doesn’t read mp3 metadata remotely correctly and since that’s how it organizes it screws up albums splitting them. Also when you navigate on the phone app by genre it goes genre, then songs, then gives a massive list of songs. Nobody with a music collection visualizes music like that. It should go genre, artist, album, song. And there’s no option to force navigating like that and despite requests i’ve read they won’t do it. Apples native app switched to doing that which is why i used a 3rd party one. But it’s a major pain to pick like hip-hop as a genre and then just get a list 18k songs. Hell i don’t even know the names of plenty of songs. I just know when i bought the album what album it’s on. But it is useful if you have tons of music as basically a free spotify. Especially if you’re like me and have lots of out of print or local music spotify doesn’t have.

        I do like that once you figure out plex it pretty much just works. Wish i could just use vlc as the default video player cause vlc is rock solid and rarely fails me in terms of competent playback. I researched Jellyfin but won’t get to try it until i buy a NAS.
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      96. I see from one comment that Plex has a relay server. ( I’m pretty new to Plex.) But, I don’t want to open port or activate UPnP on my router. Can you Tailscale directly into your home Plex server ?
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      97. I like the look of Jellyfin but that is a hard pass when it comes to the need to install docker to run it.
        Like VMware…Docker is a waste of time and effort if all you plan on doing is running the one thing… Both Docker and VMware are only worthwhile for a very small number of use cases.
        It is like Buying a flatbed truck and then hauling around your sports car with it.
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      98. Having gone from plex premium -> emby premium -> jellyfin, if possible you really should run a 3 side by side to get an idea of what each is like day to day. Once you have one setup it’s not difficult to tack them onto each other. They all have “gotchas”

        I’ve long abandoned plex, I don’t think I’ve use it in a few years.

        I’ve found surprisingly the Roku app for jellyfin has FINALLY solved the h265 (my Rokus are old and need hw transcoding) bug that has was in all of them, it made playback unusable, really. The Roku and android TV apps both have been flawless lately.

        I’m hopeful for jellyfin for the first time in awhile, the development seems to be back on track. The Roku app is still getting consistent new features added, they are also implementing new features like playlists and other stupid things that emby has ignored. I do wish jellyfin had a backup app, EmbyBackup was one of my favorite features, I’m surprised there isn’t even a plugin (that I’ve been able to find anyways).

        Once I figured out there was an intro skip plugin available I’ve been on jellyfin exclusively.

        My library is ~40tb
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      99. Plex has the Trump card in all comparisons. They are the only 1 with a relay server option. I’d pay for something like jellyfin to supply a relay service for remote playback outside the home.
        That’s the main reason I still use plex over the alternatives.
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      100. I’ve used plex for years, went to Emby and then Jellyfin, now back on plex, it just works.
        Jellyfin is my second favorite but apps are garbage.
        I wish Plex had more customization like Jellyfin though. We need need a Plexifin lol
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      101. To me plex is still ahead of jellyfin, simply because it has the share screen feature, while on jellyfin, despite having the icon, it just doesn’t work. Besides, plex has the subtitle seeker built in, while the other is done though an extension. The movies and tv show covers are also very accurate, and if you don’t find it, it’s fairly simple to seach for it. On Jellyfin you have to go to imdb to search for the right cover, and that’s kind of a handful.
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