Media Server For Mac Mini



With the arrival of the fourth-generation Apple TV, I found myself trying out the Plex media server, and I realized that using Plex is one of the best ways to watch media on the Apple TV.

Plex is one of many Mac media server and/or DVR solutions. Rivals include: The Kodi media server (which can work with Plex, too) Geniatech's EyeTV 3 DVR. SiliconDust's HDHomeRun DVR. Channels, which streams and records live TV. Emby, a media server with live TV and DVR support. PLEX MEdia Server. Plex Media Server is an amazing media center for Mac OS that really has great. Now I get remote shutdown working with Mac Mini in headless config with the Mac Mini tucked behind all the stereo stuff. Now I get MC25 installed on Win laptop and get server/client config so that I can see the Mac Mini library etc. All seems good until I try to control the Mac Mini server remotely from the win machine.

Media Server For Mac MiniServerMiniMedia

You can install the Plex server software on a variety of devices: your Mac, a PC, a NAS (network attached storage device), and more. (Heck, you could even set it up on a Raspberry Pi.)

It’s advantageous that Plex’s server be always on, so you can start watching your movies and TV shows without having to boot your Mac. If you have a large media collection, you may want to use a Mac as a dedicated device to run Plex. The Mac mini is a perfect candidate for this. Plex doesn’t need a lot of horsepower to manage and stream your media, unless it transcodes video. (If you do have a lot of videos that need transcoding, a NAS might not be a good fit for Plex.)

In this article, I’m going to tell you how you can set up a Mac mini as a dedicated Plex server. You can, of course, use that Mac mini for other things, such as using it as a file server, or for Time Machine backups.

Media Server For Mac

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Plex Media Server Mac Mini M1

Read the rest of the article on Macworld.