- neo2478@sh.itjust.worksEnglish7 hours
The only thing keeping me with Plex (bought lifetime like 10 years ago) is that I serve content to elderly family members in two different countries other than the one I live in.
Otherwise I’d be Jellyfin all the way!
a1studmuffin@aussie.zoneEnglish
40 secondsYou can do this with Jellyfin too, there’s lots of guides online on how to set it up. Requires a bit of self-hosting knowledge, but if you’re reading this there’s a good chance you have that.
- Postmortal_Pop@lemmy.worldEnglish8 hours
Incase you haven’t heard it enough, jellyfin is free and not anymore difficult to set up. If I can figure it out then you’re probably well capable of it.
- zr0@lemmy.dbzer0.comEnglish1 hour
There is still no feature parity. I even have Emby lifetime but still switched back to Plex, because it is unfortunately so much better.
Jellyfin lacks a good head engineer, which is why it will always be subpar to Plex and also Emby
- BassTurd@lemmy.worldEnglish5 hours
Unless something has changed, it doesn’t have the remote streaming capabilities of Plex. Not saying one can’t remote stream, but it’s not as simple as installing a client and logging in. It requires network config and security, VPNs, and each client to setup stuff too. Please correct me if I’m wrong on that though.
Plex has been enshitifying but I’m on the lifetime pass so for me things are free and just work still.
- 4 hours
A VPN has never been required. You can always just configure a port forward and/or firewall on your router.
https://jellyfin.org/docs/general/post-install/networking/
It’s not particularly difficult, and it’s fully documented.
- halfsak@lemmy.worldEnglish49 minutes
You’re right in that its fully documented, but it seems your understanding differs from the documentation. Your provided link explicitly says, “Opening a port directly to the Internet is therefore insecure and not recommended.”
ripcord@lemmy.worldEnglish
3 hoursAnd the jellyfin developers have said that several of the security concerns around doing this will likely never be resolved.
Also if you want HTTPS, and goodlordits2026ofcourseyoudo, this is absolutely not as easy as opening a port.
- 31 minutes
Fair enough! I run my own kubernetes cluster at home, that has JF as a service 😅
So I may be slightly out of touch
∟⊔⊤∦∣≶@lemmy.nzEnglish
3 hoursIt really is as simple as installing a client and logging in. Simpler, actually. You can just open it in a browser and login. Any hosting is going to require network config, but it’s just port forwarding which is as basic as it gets
- BassTurd@lemmy.worldEnglish2 hours
I’m seeing that you can use VPN like tailscale, setup a reverse proxy, or just open ports. Just opening ports and giving direct access is a security vulnerability and not recommended. VPN is easy, but not something I would want to try and get my clients to sign up for and show them how to use. Reverse proxy seems like the best option, but that’s not easier than just installing the Plex client for streaming that has the proxy built in.
Kokesh@lemmy.worldEnglish
8 hoursI think I deleted Plex$ I think 4 or 5 years ago and never looked back. Jellyfin is 1:1 replacement for me. I plugged it to my certbot Letsencrypt certificates, did ip forward on exit of my wireguard tunnel connected to my domain and can play my stuff anywhere. It runs fine on old thin client qith ancient quad-core AMD GX cpu. No transcoding acceleration, but I have net fast everywhere I go, so I don’t need it.
Arcden@lemmy.zipEnglish
8 hoursAnd this right here is exactly why I chose Jellyfin. If it’s owned by a company it will just get worse over time.
- thejml@sh.itjust.worksEnglish8 hours
It was definitely worth it for the $40 I paid a long time ago. I used it a little longer than desired because Jellyfin’s DVR support wasn’t always there. It is now and i haven’t used Plex in over a year.
IMHO, Jellyfin needs a bit better UI, but Plex is actively making theirs worse, so…
- 5 hours
I think i paid $75 or $90 probably a decade ago or more now and think it was worth it, and still use it, but $750 is just nuts. At this price, they clearly don’t want anyone actually buying it but without having to face the backlash of outright removing the option altogether. I would imagine one of their next steps will be to remove or restrict people like me who bought it long ago. We’ll probably get locked to a specific version that comes out right before some major update that fixes long held issues that people have complained about for years.
I would switch to Jellyfin but Plex makes sharing secure and easy and it is full of great features for the price I paid long ago. I also have a lifetime pass with Emby that I bought during a dark period of Plex but they also went closed source (which spawned Jellyfin into existence) and always felt much less refined than Plex in most areas.







