dcoke22 wrote: ↑Mon Jan 08, 2024 11:31 pm
People like to use Plex for a couple of reasons. On the server side, Plex keeps a library of information about the movies and TV shows imported into Plex. If files are named correctly, Plex can download things like cover art and a synopsis and present them to clients that access the Plex server. On the client side, there's a Plex app for just about every platform and it does a decent job at having an interface that's easy to navigate from the couch using a remote control.
Oh I see, so it's a bit like Kodi then. I use Kodi but not in the way it's intended -- I just use it as a barebones GUI frontend for browsing the folder structure of my SATA drives and launching the media files. I don't use any of the library metadata features like cover art etc. as I found it to be unreliable and it would randomly be missing items that were in my library if it wasn't perfectly named or something, I don't remember much other than fighting with it and still not getting it organised how I wanted it to. In the end I use my own folder structure conventions which I find more intuitive when browsing by genre, year, actor etc. I have configured Kodi to launch MPC-HC as the media player instead of its own inbuilt player. Probably the best feature of Kodi for me simply the automatic ticking of videos watched, with configurable minutes of watch time before ticking occurs (I'm using 10 minutes currently). Yes that even works with MPC-HC as it appears Kodi is counting the running time of the target process (mpc-hc.exe). Without that feature I would be lost.
dcoke22 wrote: ↑Mon Jan 08, 2024 11:31 pm
Most people don't have a computer hooked to their TV, but modern TVs can run apps and/or the inexpensive streaming box connected to their TV can run the Plex client app and let people navigate their library of movies and stream them right to their TV.
Ah yes that makes sense. I see they have an android app so any smart TV could be used to play from the NAS. My TV is still a dumb TV from 2013 so I'm a bit out of the loop.
Looking at NAS devices, it seems I don't even need a NAS, all I need some kind of drive bay thing which attaches to LAN so I can access files on the drives over the LAN via a TCP/IP address. I don't need it to do anything more than that so a $400 NAS seems kind of overkill.
edit: neat, I just connected a 2.5" USB HDD to my router's USB port and now I can access it on all windows PC's on the LAN via \\192.168.1.1\ in the file explorer address bar, which can be mapped to a drive letter as well and therefore accessed through Kodi. That's pretty cool!
edit: pic
edit: ha, it even supports DLNA...I guess that means it would be possible to install a DLNA Android app on a smart TV and stream video to it? Is that how that works?