Hi there,
I’m thinking about what kind of opportunities there is for a portable media center you can have with you in the car, train or whatever.
I imagine that the media center would create its own WiFi, so that devices would be able to connect to it and access the media.
I know you could do something with a Raspberry Pi, but how could this work in practice? What would be an easy way to access the media from an iPad fx? What software could be used?
As a bonus, it would be pretty cool if the media center could connect to a hotel WiFi and then create a hotspot from that.
Edit: This would be used when on the move. So you would have the media with you on the media center.
- You don’t need anything as elaborate as you appear to be contemplating. - Insert a large capacity microSD card into your mobile phone and load it up with media. - Share as required. - I use iPhone and the kids have iPads, but let’s say I had a phone with expandable storage. How would I share the content from the phone to the iPads? - How much storage do they have these days? Personally I’d just load a bunch of media directly on to the devices and not worry about additional hardware or networks. - The iPads only have 64GB and I do usually download some stuff from Netflix, ATV+ and Plex if it actually worked. 
 
 
 
- My Plex server runs in my home and all my media is available outside my home. A travel server seems like a solution for a problem that doesn’t really exist. - If you are on the road or simply travelling a place with bad internet, then what? - You read, you walk, you get to see places… - Genius! Why didn’t I think of that 😂 
 
- When I know I’m travelling, I always download a few select movies and the next few episodes of whatever we’re currently watching to my devices. - Plex allows me to download using my PlexPass. My family/everyone else that uses my server download the media they want via my JellyFin server (serving the same media as my Plex server). 
- I use Plex’s download feature to make sure I always have music available. The same could be done for other media but I don’t bother. 
- At least in the case of a Jellyfin server, you can download media locally when you know you’ll be without internet - True, but if your devices, in this case; iPads with only 64GB, it quickly gets filled up. 
 
- Not sure if this helps, but e-sims are extremely cheap and can be set up on the go through an app these days. You could get a 5g plan in the area with bad internet and use it as a hotspot to download content to your other devices. I use Nomad, but there are a lot of providers with plans that are unlimited or pay by the gig—all affordable with time periods as short as 7 days. - A $10 solution, in a pinch, is a good choice. - It’s not a bad solution and I have used eSIMs before when I was traveling in Asia. However, all of these “unlimited” eSIM plans has a lot of buts. Either the speed is limited to close to unusable for streaming and/or you are limited to only use x amount of GB when using hotspot. - Also depending on the country, the coverage can be awful. 
 
 
 
- If you’re carrying your media with you, you could run Jellyfin on the server to provide access to the media to anyone connected to its wifi. - Exactly. The point is to carry the media with you and access it without an actual internet connection. Especially on the go. - If I understand you correctly, I could install Jellyfin on a Raspberry Pi, setup a local WiFi on it and connect to it with an iPad that has a Jellyfin client installed? - and connect to it with an iPad that has a Jellyfin client installed? - In my experience, you don’t even need the dedicated Jellyfin client. Just opening it up in a web browser works out of the box, so that’s potentially one less thing to download/install/manage for the clients. - That said, I’ve never tried to access Jellyfin from an iPad/iPhone/Mac so it might not be as seamless as my experiences on Android/Linux based devices. But I imagine they’d be fine; just test it out before you hit the road. - Generally the app is better. Compatible with more container formats, audio formats (surround sound, Dolby digital, etc), and has hardware supported decoding for h265 video in addition to h264. 
 
- Yes, I’ve done almost exactly this while traveling. You can even carry around a couple variously configured sd cards for different use cases. I had one with jellyfin for sharing locally and also Kodi for direct HDMI connection to TVs. There is a in app on Android for jellyfin called findroid that allows offline copies from the media server, which allowed me to not need the thing powered the entire time I wanted to watch something on my phone, just long enough to download it. Adding samba shares adds a other layer of accessibility. I had another SD Card with video game ROMs for retro gaming, but this one got left at home because it requires controllers and I didn’t think I’d use it that much. I had another with “little backup box” installed for automatically backing up my photos and videos after a day out exploring with my camera. - I used a Raspberry pi 5 for all of this, running from a battery backup, because I didn’t really need a keyboard once I had remote connections to my phone sorted out. Pick a rugged case and you case just toss it in your bag of chargers. It took up about as much space as a pack of cigarettes. Another option would be the Raspberry Pi 400, built into a keyboard. A little bulkier, but maybe more resilient in the face of technical difficulties. 
- Yup. If the sd card doesnt have enough space for everything, you could attach an m.2 hat to it as well. https://www.raspberrypi.com/news/using-m-2-hat-with-raspberry-pi-5/ - Basically, jellyfin on the pi, with the wifi setup as an access point, and whatever amount of storage you need. The pi requires 5v/5a, so you’ll probably run into issues running off the car usb power, but a cheap 30amp hour battery should run it for 6-10 hours if my napkin math is right. 
- You don’t need a special client, just a browser. Otherwise, yep! 
 
 
- While I agree with others pointing out the oddity of a portable server in general: this sounds like a great use-case for a laptop. - Built-in battery, wifi you can broadcast out as a hotspot, and it even has a display/keyboard/mouse for troubleshooting! - An older laptop with the optical drive stripped out could have a 2.5” 5TB HDD in addition to the boot drive for some decent mobile storage. 
- Feels like a convoluted way of using an external hard drive. - Can you connect the hard drive to multiple devices? 😉 
 
- Probably an rpi and a travel router. But seems like the best setup would be a media server you kept at home and a VPN to connect to it from anywhere. - Why would you need a travel router? - The rpi already can be set up to hotspot it’s own wifi network. - For connecting to hotel wifi, a simple usb dongle is good enough, as discussed here: https://forums.raspberrypi.com/viewtopic.php?t=287485 
 - In regards to VPN-ing into the media server at home - depending on where you travel, you might not have any internet or you might use up your mobile data volume. - I used a raspberry pi 3 with RaspAP in this use case in my room at home for some time. Performance was not the best, but enough for my needs back then. 
- Yeah you can use the rpi as the router too 
- Exactly and thank you for the link! 😁 
 
- I am looking for a solution where you have the media with you, so you don’t need an internet connection to watch your media. - The media server at home is a great solution that I already use, but if you have 3 people watching in the car, using mobile data, you won’t have anything left when you get to your destination😅 - Pi5 may be a good solution then. Might also try a radxa x4. It has wifi 6 so more bandwidth for multiple wifi clients. Plus an m.2 slot. Only thing that sucks is there’s like no cases for it. 
 
 
- I carry a mini PC, Bluetooth remote, and HDMI cable. Then media and automatic VPN to home as every hotel and Airbnb blocks Plex. - It’s a good setup, but I don’t think this would work in a car and using iPads. 
 
- I’m running Navidrome on my Raspberry pi (4). On my phone (Pixel 8) I use Symfonium to connect with Navidrome. When I’m travelling I use Tailscale + Mullvad + Symfonium to play music from my rpi. 
- Fuck it, throw a 512 GB SD in an old phone and run a full jellyfin server in termux - I will definitely try this out! 😁 - Can’t say ive don’t the full thing myself cause I couldnt find an easy way to mount network drives (there was a lot of jerry-rigging going on), but ive gotten to a webui before 
 
 
- Search for portable Jellyfin media server projects. It looks like there’s a few out there. - If you’re going to use this in a car, it needs to be as simple as plugging in a single device and powering it on. An over-engineered solution is going to quickly turn into a headache. 
- You can install Plex on your mobile device and toggle the “share media from this device” setting. Otherwise, a steam deck would have everything an RPI has plus a GPU and a touch screen. Since there are two radios (2 and 5Ghz) on the device, you should be able to set it up as a bridge device, but I’ve not tried this personally. 
- Travel router and VPN. - What if I have no internet? 😅 - deleted by creator 
 
 
- I did this a few years ago with a stack of pi 4s connected to a four port PoE switch. One was an openWRT router, one was a plex server connected to some spinning discs via usb, and I had another you could plug an hdmi cable into and use to view the media. I eventually found out I could host the whole thing on a single pi, but it was still a fun project. Could probably do it all on a pi 5 with an nvme hat no problem. Might look into that when I get the spare tinkering money. 
- An ancient cheap small laptop would do it fine. Plex or Jellyfin software 
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