Versions:

  • 1.112.0.359
  • 1.110.0.351
  • 1.109.0.329
  • 1.92.1
  • 1.91.0
  • 1.88.1
  • 1.87.2
  • 1.84.1
  • 1.83.1
  • 1.82.2
  • 1.81.0
  • 1.79.1
  • 1.78.2
  • 1.77.3
  • 1.77.2
  • 1.76.2
  • 1.75.0
  • 1.67.1
  • 1.66.1
  • 1.65.1
  • 1.64.2
  • 1.63.3
  • 1.62.2
  • 1.60.1
  • 1.59.1
  • 1.58.1
  • 1.57.1
  • 1.56.2
  • 1.56.1
  • 1.55.0
  • 1.54.2
  • 1.53.1
  • 1.52.1
  • 1.49.1
  • 1.48.2
  • 1.47.1
  • 1.46.1
  • 1.45.0
  • 1.44.0
  • 1.43.4
  • 1.43.3
  • 1.43.2
  • 1.42.1
  • 1.41.0
  • 1.40.1
  • 1.40.0
  • 1.39.1
  • 1.39.0
  • 1.38.0
  • 1.37.0
  • 1.35.1
  • 1.34.1
  • 1.33.0
  • 1.31.1
  • 1.31.0

Plex 1.112.0.359, released by Plex, Inc. as the fifty-fifth iterative build of its long-evolving line, remains a central hub in the media-management category, giving individuals and households a unified way to organize, stream, and share personal audio, photo, and video libraries across almost any screen. Once the lightweight Plex Media Server component is pointed at folders on a Windows, macOS, Linux, or NAS host, it automatically retrieves metadata, artwork, and cast information, transcodes on the fly to suit each target device, and then delivers the content securely inside or outside the local network through the matching Plex client apps. Typical use cases include viewing a privately owned movie collection on a smart-TV while traveling, listening to lossless music files from a home server on a mobile phone, sharing family photos with relatives who have their own accounts, or hosting a watch-together session that synchronizes playback for remote friends. The platform also integrates free, ad-supported live channels and on-demand titles, so users can blend personal and commercial media in one interface. Because every prior version—now numbering fifty-five—has expanded codec support, refined the dashboard, or added features such as hardware-accelerated transcoding, mobile sync, and DVR scheduling, incremental updates like 1.112.0.359 are valued for maintaining compatibility with the newest client devices and streaming protocols. The software is available for free on get.nero.com, with downloads provided via trusted Windows package sources (e.g. winget), always delivering the latest version, and supporting batch installation of multiple applications.

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