

Both Kodi and Plex are excellent ways to consume and stream media, and each have their advantages.
Plex, meanwhile, began its life as a spin-off, closed-source program that rivals Kodi in nearly every way, designed to stream your media over your home network or to computers across the internet around the world. Since then, the program has evolved into Kodi, a media center program designed to work on basically every platform in existence. Kodi, now in its seventeenth version, was originally called XBMC, or Xbox Media Center, dates back to 2002, and features the ability to play all sorts of online and local content back from your Xbox (thus the name) without the support of Windows Media Center. You might not be familiar with Plex or Kodi, but both programs have an entwined history with each other. Yes, there’s more to keep up on than every before in 2017, and thankfully, there are finally ways to take your favorite shows, movies, and media with you on the go. And that doesn’t even include independent media, like videos or short films on YouTube and Vimeo. There’s more movies being released in theaters every year, and lots of them demand for you to keep up with their sequels and spin-offs to know the plot of future movies down the road. Every week brings a new major album release, and in 2017, it seems that every album is a “must listen,” making it more and more difficult to keep up. Television has gotten better than ever, with new, critically acclaimed shows releasing all the time. In the age of the internet, there’s more content to watch, read, and listen to than ever before, making it a challenge to keep up with the media landscape.
