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Television Apple

Plex Is Coming To Apple TV 89

sfcrazy writes: Apple announced that it is turning Apple TV into a platform, opening it up for third party developers. They have already published the beta of tvOS and tvOS SDK, which developers can play with. Which means Plex is now a possibility on Apple TV. The founder of Plex said, "There is no question we will be able to offer Plex on the platform. There are multiple ways to go about it, based on the tvOS SDK we now have access to. We are now evaluating the best path for Plex and will begin work in earnest once we have evaluated the options. The ability to access great and proven iOS frameworks on the device is great for developers like us — we know the stuff is solid and will perform really well. Our goal is to enable people to enjoy Plex on the hardware platforms of their choice, and there is no doubt this will be a top platform for us."
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Plex Is Coming To Apple TV

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  • "We have nothing new to offer this time round, so we're turning our existing offering into a... PLATFORM. w00t."

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Not plex per se (I'm not a fan of where they took the project since late 2013) but I've always considered lack of support for local media to be a showstopper for Apple TV.

    If I knew I could install something like Kodi or an emby client that could supply unrestricted access to my local content, I'd buy an Apple TV tomorrow.

    • Not plex per se (I'm not a fan of where they took the project since late 2013) but I've always considered lack of support for local media to be a showstopper for Apple TV.

      Huh? I've been using iTunes to serve up rips of my purchased DVDs and Blu-Ray discs to my Apple TV for years.

      I'm not all that crazy about using iTunes, but it works and has been fairly stable for me. And the Apple TV (and Macs in general) has been the only client that never seems to hiccup on some older movies I've got (like The Front Page) that, for whatever reason, are at a slightly non-standard aspect ratio. I'm looking forward to trying out Plex as an alternative (although I'm in agreement with you- I'm

      • by rthille ( 8526 )

        That's not local media. That's remote. Local media is stored on the device, doesn't need the device to be on the network, and doesn't require your mac/windows box to be turned on and running iTunes.

        Kinda like the AppleTV V1 was.

    • Re:That would help (Score:4, Informative)

      by Overzeetop ( 214511 ) on Friday September 11, 2015 @05:35AM (#50501439) Journal

      Yeah - any iTunes library worked. Music, Movies, Photos - any content you could load onto a machine. A $150 headless win machine could do it.

      The only problem was auto-loading of content. I use sabnzbd/usenet to load serial content (TV shows), and that doesn't play well with iTunes. Also, I can get Plex served when I'm not at home and iTunes isn't good at that either.

  • What is Plex (Score:5, Informative)

    by steveha ( 103154 ) on Friday September 11, 2015 @03:03AM (#50501147) Homepage

    Plex is a home media server, forked from XBMC.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plex_(software) [wikipedia.org]

    Wikipedia says the server is "freemium" so I guess it's free but you can buy upgrades. There are apps for iOS and Android; the apps aren't free either. And there is some kind of cloud account you can get, and use for syncing your content across the Internet.

    I've never heard of this before, but it seems worth checking out if you don't already have a media center solution.

    Plex web site:
    https://plex.tv/ [plex.tv]

    Breakdown of what you can get for free vs. what costs:
    https://support.plex.tv/hc/en-us/articles/202526943-Plex-Free-vs-Paid [support.plex.tv]

    Reddit discussion of cost of Plex:
    https://www.reddit.com/r/Chromecast/comments/2f9f0k/what_is_the_true_cost_of_plex/ [reddit.com]

    • by Ecuador ( 740021 ) on Friday September 11, 2015 @06:25AM (#50501523) Homepage

      I had never heard of it before getting a Samsung Smart TV and since I didn't actually get the 51" Plasma to watch broadcast television, I had to find a way to stream my media from a server, without actually having a laptop next to the TV. Anyway, I looked up possible technologies and DLNA that the TV supported seemed the best solution. After I painfully found out DLNA in practice is riddled with problems, I went back to google and Plex came up. A free Plex Media Sever was installed on the Mac Pro, an also free client was installed on the Smart TV, et voila, streaming with full support of any format I had, multiple audio & subtitle streams, plus excellent library organization (it recognizes your media, shows covers/meta data, even downloads subtitles automatically with the proper plugin).
      I also got a chromecast dongle at some point and I use it to send some browser video streams to the TV, but for two years now Plex has served me very well. If you have a platform, like a Smart TV/Smart Bluray etc where the Plex client is free, definitely give it a try.

      • After I painfully found out DLNA in practice is riddled with problems, I went back to google and Plex came up.

        For people who cannot install Plex and must use DLNA, there is PS3MediaServer, a transcoding DLNA server for major operating systems.

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      Wikipedia says the server is "freemium" so I guess it's free but you can buy upgrades. There are apps for iOS and Android; the apps aren't free either. And there is some kind of cloud account you can get, and use for syncing your content across the Internet.

      It's freemium.

      Free features is local media server and online streaming.

      Pay and you can get a premium account. Premium features include free apps, use of a third party cloud storage provider, offline mode and others.

      The Plex apps work by either charging y

  • by mccalli ( 323026 ) on Friday September 11, 2015 @04:29AM (#50501309) Homepage
    This is excellent news for me. I have a Synology and a 10.6.8-based original Intel Mac Mini that just acts as an iTunes and Crashplan server. All my films converted from DVD/blu-ray are stored on the Synology, but I need iTunes running to be able to access it on the Apple TV. With this I should be able to use Plex on the Synology and remove the need for iTunes. Crashplan can also be made to run on a Synology, so I can completely eliminate the need for that Mac Mini.

    With a few more apps, like Amazon Instant and BBC iPlayer, this thing could then completely cover what I do. One caveat - just please, please, please give me paid app options and not freebies with adverts in the UI.
    • by Pope ( 17780 )

      I have an old Intel Mac with a Broadcom HD decoder chip in place of the WiFi card, running XBMC with Crystal HD. Works like a charm.

    • This is excellent news for me. I have a Synology and a 10.6.8-based original Intel Mac Mini that just acts as an iTunes and Crashplan server. All my films converted from DVD/blu-ray are stored on the Synology, but I need iTunes running to be able to access it on the Apple TV. With this I should be able to use Plex on the Synology and remove the need for iTunes. Crashplan can also be made to run on a Synology, so I can completely eliminate the need for that Mac Mini. With a few more apps, like Amazon Instant and BBC iPlayer, this thing could then completely cover what I do. One caveat - just please, please, please give me paid app options and not freebies with adverts in the UI.

      My big question is: Why doesn't Apple just create an iTunes daemon, so you don't have to do hinky shit like "create a user account and run iTunes on it all the time"; which inevitably leads to whining by the OS if you have to Restart the "server" computer? Could it be THAT difficult to create a faceless version of the iTunes app that launchd launches when needed, and that has iTunes Sharing always on? Heck, just a small tweak to the iTunes Library database and it could have user-specific Libraries, too, wit

  • by wbr1 ( 2538558 ) on Friday September 11, 2015 @04:50AM (#50501359)
    I have been using plex for over a year. I do not subscribe, I have use the free system as a media server on my primary home machine.

    When I got a chromecast, I did pay for the 4.99 app so that I could use it to stream to the chromecast. I was using Bubble UPnP + MxPlayer for android playback, but BubbleUPnPs chromecast support was limited. Now BubbleUpnP has it but requires a separate paid transcoding server, so I stuck with Plex across the board.

    Paying for plex allows easy setup of across the internet streaming. I never needed that feature since I have a business class connection, static IP and VPN at home. When I am travelling, my devices llook like they are on my LAN anyway, so need to stream some other way out of my network.

    The only issue I have had is that randomly (after days) the plex server program will stop responding and need a restart. That is easy enough to do, although I could probably post on their forums and look at the logs to determine why.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I think Apple TV is over kill for what most people want in a entertainment device. Many just want a streaming device and not a full blown device that runs apps and other crap. If your into gaming your going to buy a PS4 or Xbox of some kind. Apple is trying to exploit the Apple TV to sell apps and other Apple products but they fail to keep the price inline with other devices. Unless your married to Apple your not going to spend $150 to stream Netflix. Your going to buy a USB stick and/or a Roku like device

    • gosh, you are so right, people are the experts on what they want, nobody ever comes out with good ideas

    • I think Apple TV is over kill for what most people want in a entertainment device. Many just want a streaming device and not a full blown device that runs apps and other crap.

      And if you'd watched the Keynote, you'd know that they are continuing to sell the current model AppleTV for $69, which meets the needs you mentioned.

  • And about too fucking late. With A-Fire and Roku being 1/2 the cost and Chromecast being 1/3 the cost of the cheaper v3, and not requiring a secure cert hack and hijack of another app, or jailbreaking of an old model, I've put them on all the other TVs.

    Apple needs to bring more to the party. Like a la carte cable channels. That would be "One More Thing..." that would make me drop the cash.

    • Apple needs to bring more to the party. Like a la carte cable channels. That would be "One More Thing..." that would make me drop the cash.

      The a la carte cable channels are a function of what the individual channels allow. Lots of channels are making lots of deals with lots of streaming companies to allow just that. Others are sticking strictly with the cable providers [for now]. Apple made an exclusive deal with HBO recently so you can get that already (app is HBO Now as opposed to HBO Go). CBS is 'out there' too but they're crazy expensive. ESPN made a deal with Sling. I suspect that in five years you'll be able to get most anything (b

    • Apple needs to bring more to the party. Like a la carte cable channels. That would be "One More Thing..." that would make me drop the cash.

      You mean like this [apple.com], which they have had working for a bit, or this [inquisitr.com] which they have been working on for most of this year?

  • Roku validated the open channel (app) model. Looks like Apple is jealous of Roku's success and decided to copy their model.

    Apple has very few original ideas.

  • I've been running Plex on a Mac Mini for about 5years now. Great software, easy interface and optimized for controlling with an apple remote control (silver 3 button, not white 2 button) or iphone app. I have it connected via HDMI directly to my receiver and GigE to my LAN. All my content I keep on a NAS array in the corner.

    I actually bought the mac mini specifically for Plex as at the time windows and linux support was kinda weak. Now they've got plex running in TVs and other devices.

    • I ran an older (core2-duo) mac Mini connected to my livingroom TV via DVI/HDMI for years, just playing videos in VLC set to full screen, and using a bluetooth trackpad as a remote, using the Finder as an interface. It got the job done, but was a bit clunky and twiddly. For whatever reason, I couldn't ever get Plex to run as both server and client without horrible performance issues (the earlier Minis were well known for wimpy video power). With some recent home wiring improvements I swapped the mini for an
  • by Danathar ( 267989 ) on Friday September 11, 2015 @09:31AM (#50502379) Journal

    What this announcement shows, is that players like Roku need to be VERY afraid.

    Say all you want about the fact that the new Apple TV specs wise is ho hum (and I'd agree with you), but the fact of the matter is that all those people who are familiar with Xcode development and the IOS APIs now can develop for tvOS.

    What that means is that in a VERY short amount of time the number of apps will go from zero to crazy in no time at all. Roku has struggled for a LONG time to get a good set of apps for people to use. There are hardly that many games for Roku (the major ones though like Angry Birds are there) and everything else are screensavers, streaming channels or Church apps (for the most part).

    Say what you want about how the Apple TV sucks, the fact that millions of Xcode developers for IOS can develop for it means it will pretty much sink companies like Roku.

  • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Plex is awesome (Score:4, Informative)

    by sremick ( 91371 ) on Friday September 11, 2015 @10:59AM (#50503279)

    I'm not getting all the hate for Plex. Plex is amazing.

    It's not just a media server. It's a full-blown server and media management and distribution system akin to running your own Netflix. I paid the one-time lifetime pass and it's been totally worth it. We stream to many Rokus, computers and Android devices amongst my household and immediate family.

    Having paid for the PlexPass, all the clients I add to my Plex Home group are free so users don't have to pay for each client. I run it on a 6-disc FreeNAS RAIDZ2 system that has enough CPU horsepower to run Plex Server right on the NAS itself. The system is beautiful and amazingly capable. Just drop any old video file on, and Plex handles everything else: metadata, posters, trailers, organization, and any necessary transcoding to play any type of video file onto any client regardless of its capabilities.

    I know Emby is popular because it's open-source, and perhaps some parts of it are better than Plex (I've never used Emby). But the reviews I've seen put them pretty close to each other, with often Plex having a slight edge overall. But probably ultimately depends on what you're doing with it and what features matter to you.

    Anyone who flat out hates Plex probably doesn't understand how it's really supposed to be used and what needs it's meant to address. It's easy to hate the perfect screwdriver if you're trying to use it as a hammer.

    • I would add to this the mobile power it has too - all of which I've wanted from iTunes for a long time.

      With PlexPass I can tell each client what I want to sync, how much space to use, how many episodes to sync etc, so my mobile devices always have what I need to watch - and it'll do it over WiFi and cell connections too.

      If I want an episode on the way into work, Plex will remove it from my iPhone and automatically queue up the next for the trip home. What isn't downloaded will stream, whether I'm in the hou

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