Streaming service and media software maker Plex on Friday introduced a redesign of its software that puts more emphasis on discovery, easily accessing
Streaming service and media software maker Plex on Friday introduced a redesign of its software that puts more emphasis on discovery, easily accessing your watchlist, and other personalization features — including those for home media enthusiasts who still use the app to organize their media libraries.
I host a media server of 72TB of classic movies, cancelled TV shows you can't get on streaming plus new shows and movies as well. I do this for family and friends who don't have the patience or know how to run a media server this size. I have a catalog of over 7k movies and 400 TV shows. I am likely the only use case for this. However I do appreciate it.
For someone's personal use I usually suggest jellyfin.
I've only dabbled in Plex, but Im kinda confused about the hate for this. Isn't the whole point to be able to more easily browse and use a large media library (esspecially for something like a shared library)? This seems like its useful to that purpose.
I've put a lot of effort into making plex posters that match/have a uniform look for 90% of my library, from what I've seen this will make all that useless as they switch to what appears to be fanart only. I don't necessarily care for that change.
There are numerous dubiously legal (at best) streaming services that serve using Plex.
Why pay for Netflix, Hulu, Disney+, Paramount, etc when you can buy one service at lower cost that any of those, have all the big stuff automatically, and request whatever you want, just with a slight delay.