I'm in the process of moving from plex to jellyfin (even though I have a lifetime plex pass).
plex has some nicer things
1) skip intro built in and usable in all the clients I use (on jellyfin you can add it as a plugin, but not supported universally in clients)
2) the UI of plex is so much nicer/cleaner. Not a huge deal for me, but would be a show stopper for others
3) in all honesty, but much better library management (at a simple level, the ability to see what hasn't been "matched"/"identified")
probably more, but I'm just at the start of my migration
why did I switch? because jellyfin has 2 major features that plex seems to have no intention of adding
1) the ability to tonemap DV content to SDR (plex can tonemap HDR10 to SDR, but not DV, it be interesting in future if jellyfin would have the ability to tonemap DV to HDR10)
2) the abilty to have "external" transcoders. i.e. one can add cheap intel boxes (under $100) to get quicksync transcoding to an already existing installation. Can make it easy and cheap to scale.
plex has some nicer things
1) skip intro built in and usable in all the clients I use (on jellyfin you can add it as a plugin, but not supported universally in clients)
2) the UI of plex is so much nicer/cleaner. Not a huge deal for me, but would be a show stopper for others
3) in all honesty, but much better library management (at a simple level, the ability to see what hasn't been "matched"/"identified")
probably more, but I'm just at the start of my migration
why did I switch? because jellyfin has 2 major features that plex seems to have no intention of adding
1) the ability to tonemap DV content to SDR (plex can tonemap HDR10 to SDR, but not DV, it be interesting in future if jellyfin would have the ability to tonemap DV to HDR10)
2) the abilty to have "external" transcoders. i.e. one can add cheap intel boxes (under $100) to get quicksync transcoding to an already existing installation. Can make it easy and cheap to scale.