Plex Media Server is a great media player for streaming your favorite content from your computer to your TV. But it can be a little hard to find a way to use it on Linux. Plex finally has a Linux desktop player! Plex Media Server is now available as an Ubuntu 12.04 LTS release candidate and it’s available in the repositories of Ubuntu. The new Plex Media Server LXDE desktop player is based on the GNOME 3 desktop environment and it’s easy to use. You can control playback of media files, add users, and manage subscriptions. If you’re looking for an easy way to stream your media from your computer to your TV, Plex is the perfect choice!


Plex is one of the most popular ways to stream your own media collection, but there hasn’t been an officially-available app for playing all Plex content on Linux — until now.

Plex revealed in a blog post today that the Plex desktop application (the client for playing content, not the server) is finally officially available for Linux systems. It’s distributed as a Snap package, which means you need a distribution that supports Snap and the framework installed. Snap is installed by default on Ubuntu Linux, and it also works on Arch, Fedora, Pop!_OS, KDE Neon, openSUSE, Debian, and other distributions.

While this is the same desktop Plex app available on Mac and Windows, it’s more or less just the plex.tv interface with the added bonus of offline support (so you can save movies and other content for offline watching later). The current version of the app first launched on Windows and macOS in 2019, replacing the older Universal Windows Platform (UWP) version that was designed for Windows 10 and Windows Phone. Plexamp, an alternative app that is built for only streaming music from a Plex server, is already available for Linux.

You can download Plex for Linux from the Snap store, or by running sudo snap install plex-desktop in the Terminal on a Linux PC with Snap already installed. Plex says a Flatpak version will also be available at some point.

Source: Plex Blog