It's in a container on my nas, runs well, I can play videos no matter where I am, and I own all of the content on it, so no random disappearing content like on Netflix etc
Simple Docker container, no, you don't need anything powerful at all, containers take up very little space and to run Plex you really don't need much at all, some people even run Plex on Raspberry Pi's. The main thing is storage space, I have 12TB NAS drives, they're very expensive so not practical, and I've filled one and half of them with movies and TV shows 😀What type of container are you using? Are containers heavy? Do you need a powerful NAS to host a container?
Pretty much any operating system on any level of machine can run Docker and Plex, once the Plex Media Server is active and running you download Plex on your TV, phone, etc and sign in, you're good to go!Docker, what are the requirements?
I believe you can have one account running Plex on the free plan no matter where you are, after that you need the Plex pass which is $4.99usd/monthI think it is paid to use Plex outside our home.
Jellyfin for a bit, but it's a little more awkward to useHave you tried anything other than Plex?
I'm not sure if it work when installed in a VM, though realistically there's no reason it shouldn't be possible. Just not something I've done at this point, lolIf I install Jellyfin on a VM, can I access it on my network? Any idea how to do it?
Mine is my server ip and then port 32400, works on the web and then works through the client. That's Plex, though, Jellyfin should be similar, but not exact.Wondering what the URL would be.
I think you could run it inside of just Windows by itself if that's what you wanted to do, I think Synology's OS runs it by default (I have a Synology NAS, but I went with a Docker container, because...well...I don't really know, lol, it's the method I was most comfortable with), but if you're running something like Unraid or TrueNAS, I believe it does have to be in a Docker containerAre there alternatives to Docker?
It should be pretty straight-forward, it works with practically everything, so no reason it won't work inside of a VirtualBox installationNever tried Kubernetes before. It is from Ubuntu though. Will see VirtualBox.
They should, there's really no reason they shouldn't beMy only worry is that whether those will be available outside the containers.
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