Keith Valory became president and CEO in 2013. Feingold said Plex apps had been downloaded about one million times. At that time, Plex had 130 apps, the most popular of which were viewers for iTunes movies trailers, YouTube, Hulu, Netflix, MTV music videos, BBC iPlayer and Vimeo. was incorporated with Ullman as CEO and Feingold as chief technology officer. In July 2008, the project was renamed Plex, which the developers said was chosen because "it evokes 'cineplex' and the suffix means 'comprising a number of parts'". The OSXBMC code was kept roughly in sync with the upstream XBMC code. Due to different goals from the XBMC team, they forked the code that became Plex, and published it on GitHub. The developers continued collaborating with the Linux-based XBMC project until May 21, 2008. The team released early versions of the port, called OSXBMC, intended for eventual full integration into Mac OS X. They contacted him and offered support and funding, and they formed a three-person team in January 2008. Around the same time, Cayce Ullman and Scott Olechowski-software executives who had recently sold their previous company to Cisco-were also looking to port XBMC to Mac OS X, and noticed Feingold's progress in the XBMC online forums. Plex began as a freeware hobby project in December 2007 when developer Elan Feingold created a media center application for his Mac by porting the media player XBMC (since renamed Kodi) to Mac OS X. Plex also develops media server software and a series of apps that allows users to stream their personal media collections from their servers to their various devices. is an American software company that runs its namesake ad-supported streaming media service that provides television shows and movies to users worldwide, and allows them to discuss and discover content across all major subscription streaming services.
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