I’m pretty thy a newbie when it comes to networking and stuff, but was wondering if it’s possible to run jellyfin as a server on my shield. A bit fed up looking at plex and wondering what alternatives I have. Does anyone have any good suggestions?
Edit: thanks all for the replies and suggestions.
I don’t think it’s practical. Sure, you could install termux and use that to run Jellyfin, but you won’t have a pleasant time.
The better play is, to play spend 30 Bucks on a refurbished thin client and use that as your server. If you install Open Media Vault on there you’ll never even have to touch the command line. (You’ll have to install OMV-Extras on top of Open Media Vault for that).
I’m using a Dell t520. That works really well for me.
But honestly: pretty much every client in that price range should work. Just check whether the (embedded) graphics chip can hardware transcode your media beforehand. And you probably won’t run the next Netflix on there but it’s more than enough for a family usecase with multiple streams simultaneously.
Jellyfin server isn’t available for Android. If you installed Linux on your Shield, then yeah it would run, but none of the Android streaming apps would, so meh.
Like someone else said, just get a used office computer for cheap and run your server off of that.
The hardware transcoding from even somewhat older Intel iGPUs is rock solid.
That’s interesting, thanks. I’ll need to have another think about the direction I want to go here. I would definately like to learn a bit about Linux in the process - old brain cells withstanding.
Can you run plex as a server on the shield?
I’m not really familiar with that device. Are you running android on it or Linux?
Yeah, I have it running now, but I’m unsure the direction the company is taking and looking for a jump-off point.
Edit : typo
What OS are you running? If plex works on it and it’s Linux, then Jellyfin should work just fine.
If you are on iOS the client is not nearly as good, but you should use Swiftfin. Instead of the default one.
I have no idea what Nvidia shield is like tbh… it might violate their ToS.