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The Windows 10 application is also seriously impressive. But Plex is, of course, for much more than just music. If you use OneDrive, you already have access to this feature for your own music through Groove. If you go on vacation for a couple of weeks, there's no need to leave the PC on at home. For example, you might always want your music while on the go but only need movies at home, so you could put all your music in the cloud and stream remotely anytime. What's also nice is that Plex Cloud is just another server, one you can run alongside even a local host. The initial setup seems a lot slower than it does if you host the server on a local machine, but once it gets done the setup is the same. You point Plex Cloud at the folders where you keep your media, and let it do the rest. The process of importing content remains the same. Plex Cloud means you don't need to leave a PC or NAS running at home when you're away. You won't also just automagically find all your media imported and sorted, so you need to add libraries for music, video and photos. At this point, Plex Cloud is only for your own media, and there doesn't appear to be channels support, as you'd find in the regular Plex Media Server application.
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