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I think I’ll stick to my approach, but it’s good to have options:
#Plexamp settings movie
Look up these loose ends in TheTVDB and IMDB TMDB then decide whether to put them in your TV or Movie documentary libraries accordingly (edit: someone pointed out I made a mistake, it looks like IMDB is used by Plex just for ratings, like Rotten Tomatoes).Īfter I initially posted this entry someone brought Colima to my attention.
#Plexamp settings series
Some are tricky as you may think they’re standalones but they’re actually part of an extended TV series of sorts (e.g. Chef’s Table) should be in a separate TV library. Tropicália) in a Movie library while series (e.g. Instead, make sure to put standalones (e.g. Documentaries Are Not All the Same, Or Are They?ĭocumentaries can’t be all dumped in the same library. Follow these guidelines to save you a lot of grief, depending on the type of content you plan to collect.
#Plexamp settings windows
you can’t put colons in Windows file names), as well as titles in other languages than English. However, some content types can be tricky and tiny punctuation variations can throw the agents off (e.g. Provided you apply the recommended naming conventions ( TV, movies), Plex is usually good at auto-matching and fetching the right metadata, especially since the new movie scanner and agent were introduced with PMS 1.20. Matching Recalcitrant Documentaries, TV Shows, Movies, Sports etc. (I’m not judging, it’s just that I’m not interested nor experienced with this use case).ġ0. I’m using Plex in Direct Play on my LAN and do not care about serving low-quality transcodes to the entire neighborhood as some people seem keen to do.
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And the more content you add, the more you’ll need it to be organized or the whole thing will collapse under its own weight.Īs a caveat before we move on to the meat of this entry, this post is not about streaming or transcoding. If you’re not willing to make that effort, well, garbage in garbage out, you’ll get out of your libraries what you put into them. But there’s some genre and collection metadata that has to be input via the Plex UI. Instead, metadata is best conveyed via 1) your folder/file organization and naming conventions, 2) by metatagging source files themselves, and/or 3) with helper text/json/xml files to be parsed by Plex agents or scripts. I try to steer away as much as possible from organizing or tagging content via the Plex UI, as that metadata won’t survive if you have to rebuild a library from scratch, which over the years is likely to happen eventually. If you have to take anything from this post, it’s that each type of content needs its own library with an approach that’s finetuned to it.Īs much as I try to use automation and rely on Plex’s native features, to achieve the best results be prepared for some grunt work to get more obscure content organized neatly and in line with how it’s meant to be consumed. The ways we are interacting with a tutorial, audiobook, movie, or TV series are all very different, and it takes work to bend Plex to be a good fit with all these scenarios. It’s been a long journey and I hope to accelerate your own learning curve.
#Plexamp settings Pc
Over the past decade I went back and forth between Plex and Emby as my media server of choice but eventually settled on the former after I switched my server from my desktop PC to an Nvidia Shield, then to a Docker container in a Synology NAS. I have 150TB+ in Plex organized in a dozen different libraries, learned a lot along the way, and will share my notes in this entry.
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It’s very easy to get started with Plex, but as you add different types of content and grow your libraries, it becomes more and more complicated to keep everything tidy and easy to use.
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