My jellyfin collection has finally become large enough that I have been able to cancel all my streaming services. My issue now is that I want to get rid of my Roku’s that are hooked up to each TV.

Is there a good alternative? It MUST be family approved, meaning:

  1. It is not visible (no desktop/laptop hooked up)
  2. It is low power
  3. It has a simple remote control
  4. It supports Jellyfin
  5. It is relatively cheap (< $150)

I am sure I could build something out of a raspberry pi, but:

  1. I don’t need another project I have to fiddle with
  2. It MUST support new codecs (h.265/AC1/aac/…) as I want direct play from my server
  3. If it stutters/buffers once, it goes into the trash!

I’ve generally been mostly happy with my Roku, and my pi.hole blocks most of their analytics, but last week, I pressed the home button on my Roku and it started play a video add with audio. Completely unacceptable (That has happened twice in the last week). And in general, the more of this crap I can get out of my life the better!

  • TrippyHippyDan
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    382 months ago

    If you’re happy with the Roku hardware and you’re going to cancel all your other streaming services, why not just firewall block the Roku from reaching out of your local network?

    If you do that, Jellyfin will still work fine, and you won’t have the ability to get posted ads or anything else from the Roku, so it’ll just become a Jellyfin box.

  • @hperrin@lemmy.ca
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    2 months ago

    For my parents, I got a $150 N100 mini PC (tiny little thing), installed Bazzite, installed Jellyfin, and got the Pepper Jobs W10 Gyro remote. You have to configure Jellyfin to know it’s running on a TV and to accept keyboard input (the remote acts like a keyboard), but then everything works great. It’s a little over your budget, with the added remote.

    • @dysprosium@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      12 months ago

      But Bazzite is a gaming OS, isn’t that very user unfriendly? Or do you auto start Jellyfin on startup? Or are your parents just… not boomers?

      • @hperrin@lemmy.ca
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        22 months ago

        Bazzite runs the SteamOS interface. It’s extremely user friendly. It’s designed to look like a console.

        • @dysprosium@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          32 months ago

          You have no idea what ‘user friendly’ can mean for boomers. A button that says “Next” is already something that need to be talked about explicitly

  • @CarbonatedPastaSauce@lemmy.world
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    92 months ago

    I use Kodi with the jellyfin plugin, but I can’t recommend that for ‘normies’ because the interface is not simple, and I still have glitches with it.

    I’m also looking for a solution like yours, but wanted you to have that feedback.

    • @showmeyourkizinti@startrek.website
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      2 months ago

      I’m kinda of lost with this. I run 3 librelec units on RaspberryPis velcroed to the back of TVs in my house and once I set them up they run easy as. I set them by setting what my network folders are ( I’m a bit of a data hoarder so I’ve got each tv series in their own folders and each movie and their filled in its own folders) and then hitting scan. Is it because of Jellyfin that you’re having problems? I tried setting it up but gave up when I realised I’d have to let it be a server and frankly I don’t trust my in-laws not to fuck up and post all my details on their Facebook to show off their new personalise steaming services.

      • @CarbonatedPastaSauce@lemmy.world
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        12 months ago

        I guess you are saying you only run Kodi? Yes it is Kodi with the jellyfin plugin talking to a jellyfin server that is the source of the few woes I have with it. Honestly it works really well, but when something is wrong I would say due to the UI it’s beyond most non-technical people to sort it out easily.

    • @CmdrShepard42@lemm.ee
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      72 months ago

      I don’t know how Kodi still goes on for this long. I messed around with it over a decade ago and had all the same issues back then.

  • @habitualcynic@lemmy.world
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    102 months ago

    I second the AppleTV recommendation based on your disgust with the Roku UI ads, I am completely on your side there, but my similar search has bought me to AppleTV.

    I currently run Amazon Fire Sticks which also have UI ads but my pihole is catching most of them and it’s dirt cheap with h.265 support. Plus it runs various hacked apps like TVMob, Cinema, and Cyberflix. That’s what keeps me from moving to an AppleTV or an n100 box already.

    • Lka1988
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      102 months ago

      We have a couple Apple TVs. As much as I dislike the walled garden, they are very good for what they are.

  • bigb
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    2 months ago

    I use the ONN 4K Pro and the ProjectIvy launcher. You can completely hide the standard Android TV OS launcher and its ads. Button Mapper is another good app to have on Android boxes. The remote is full of app-specific buttons that I’ve either disabled or remapped to alternative apps

    https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.spocky.projengmenu

    https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=flar2.homebutton

    I have no idea which codecs are supported.

    • nafzib
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      12 months ago

      I am about to switch over to this setup from a Roku myself. I had seen recommendations for Flauncher, but I’m glad to see another launcher recommendation. I will have to try out Project Ivy. Thanks!

    • @Landless2029@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      I second this setup.

      I have 3 ONN sticks and they do the job. Great for the price. Just sideload Kodi, new launcher, remap buttons.

      I even paid for button mapper. Totally worth it.

    • @adhocfungus@midwest.social
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      32 months ago

      This is my exact setup. The upgrade from the smart TV was night and day. Apps load instantly and Jellyfin works great. Most importantly the remote is easy to use and can control the TV.

    • a baby duck
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      22 months ago

      Not true, unless by “build yourself” you mean install Projectivy Launcher on any Android box that supports it.

        • a baby duck
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          12 months ago

          I run it on an NVIDIA Shield. Can’t speak to any others with certainty, but from a quick search, there are guides for installing on Fire Stick and ONN devices too.

          I suspect it’ll run on just about any Android or Google TV device as long as the default launcher setting isn’t locked down, and even then you can probably enable it with a couple quick ADB commands.

    • @primemagnus@lemmy.ca
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      22 months ago

      The aTV will give you the best experience when it comes to dark patterns. But just note, a new model is on the horizon, so hold out a little longer.

  • @Gabadabs@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    12 months ago

    I’ve personally been using a raspberry pi with a Bluetooth mouse and keyboard. I just run jellyfin in Firefox and navigate with the mouse - the keyboard rarely ever being necessary. I was able to increase the icon size so it’s acceptable on a tv and bookmark any streaming websites I use. It’s certainly not as clean as using something like an apple tv, but it’s serviceable and I don’t have to fiddle with plugins like when I tried Kodi. Honestly though, apple tv probably fulfills what you’re looking for like others have said.

  • @demunted@lemmy.ml
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    62 months ago

    If you are in the USA. The Walmart onn 4k (20$) and 4k pro (50$) are amazing for the price. The remotes are really good too.

    • billwashere
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      2 months ago

      It’s just a matter of time before those are enshittified as well.

      Edit: ok my bad… apparently you can side load different launchers. I may check one of those out then.

      • @nix98@lemmy.worldOP
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        12 months ago

        Can you de-google these? I have a personal rule against any google accounts or google devices…

  • @enemenemu@lemm.ee
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    32 months ago
    1. If you do not want stuttering, use a graphics card. Higher energy consumption but you can play everything
    • @CmdrShepard42@lemm.ee
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      2 months ago

      If they have a 5th gen or newer Intel CPU, Quicksync will work excellently for transcoding. No discrete GPU needed.

        • @CmdrShepard42@lemm.ee
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          22 months ago

          As many as most GPUs without all the extra cost and power draw. Nvidia sets a transcode limit of 2 sessions unless you disable it. You really shouldn’t ever be transcoding 4k content. Most people will duplicate 1080p and 4k content and not share the 4k library for remote streaming/external users to avoid transcoding, and 1080p transcodes are no sweat. Furthermore, the goal should be to avoid transcoding wherever possible, so it’s unlikely that you’d have multiple people doing intensive transcoding simultaneously if you follow the above advice. You’ll want everyone to direct play as much as possible.

  • @Chef6652@lemmy.world
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    52 months ago

    Way over-budget for your taste I guess but I still wanted to make a note here for representation sake. Look into the brand Zidoo. I have Zidoo Z9X 8K, it’s the best client I could dream of! ~250$

    Cons:

    • Android based (outdated AF but still)
    • Maybe not so secure (http server always on while the device is on, atm)

    Pros:

    • Very good support of Dolby Vision, 4K (8K maybe?)
    • Very pretty, both hardware and software very polished IMO
    • The remote is glorious, tactile with backlight
    • Lots of other cool things
    • Very snappy Android experience
    • it just works™
    • The audio downmixing works great, compared to the Google TV which was very bad
    • First party Jellyfin support among others
  • @primemagnus@lemmy.ca
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    02 months ago

    It seems like the most obvious answer is to build your own with a Pi. Run Linux and then install any player you want. You could even use the Pi as the head then network your storage.

    Also, FWIW, the latest Apple TV hasn’t seen an upgrade in about 3-4 years, so if you do go that route, bear that in mind. A new model is coming sooner than later (hopefully this year).

    • @Jarix@lemmy.world
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      12 months ago

      Did you read far enough to see that didn’t want another project? Or did you just decide that needed to hear a suggestion they already rejected again because if YOU tell them they might listen to you?