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I was listening to an album on the old version of Media Player and it reminded me of a forgotten era of UI design. The psychedelic graphic visualizers that played during songs were always so fun to look at, it's kind of embarrassing but sometimes I'd just stare at them for the duration of the album. The same thing goes for skins, a big part of the appeal of that old era was the customizability. It would be fun to just browse and download random skins from the internet, my favorite being the freaky floating green head one. I think this level of personalization and fun should really come back.
I completely agree!! I truly miss how customizable UI design used to be. Things like tumblr or myspace accounts designs were truly a forgotten art. Having to learn HTML to get cool account designs was definitely a pain but the look it gave always brought satisfaction. I loved looking for skins for my Media Player and I definitely agree that this level of personalization should make a comeback!
Sadly, there used to be a visualizer. It was kind of hidden though, and it eventually got scrapped. I wish I could have experienced it, so I hope it gets brought back with the hopeful addition of skins.
Did anyone here ever use Sonique? It was a basic media player with some of the best visualizers I've ever seen. I too, miss the heck out of those. I either having parties with those in the background, or sitting in the dark and just being mesmerized by color and sound.
Spotify, please ditch the creepy AI D.J. and work on this please
Plus! MP3 Audio Converter LE. This sample of a feature of Plus! for Windows XP enables users to double the amount of music they can store on their PC by converting their MP3 files quickly and easily to Windows Media Audio (WMA).
Windows Media Player for Windows XP Powertoys. The bonus pack includes new and updated Windows Media Player for Windows XP Powertoys, designed to give users more control over their music. Powertoys include the Windows Media Player Tray Control, which offers one-click access to Windows Media Player features from the Windows XP task bar; the Media Library Metadata Update Wizard, which organizes and updates the Media Library and My Music folders; a utility that imports playlists to Excel; and more.
Windows Media Player skins. Users of Windows XP can express themselves and customize their Windows Media Player with new skins, including the patriotic Stars and Stripes, the anime-influenced Sentinel and the TDK Digital Mixmaster skins designed by TheSkinsFactory.com.
Windows Movie Maker Creativity Kit. This expansive collection of professional sound effects, music loops, clips and title images helps users enhance their home videos and unleash their creativity. Sounds and music are provided by the major motion picture sound studio Sounddogs.com Inc.
Fans of the Windows Media Bonus Pack for Windows XP are sure to love Plus! for Windows XP, the Ultimate Companion to Windows XP. Plus! includes powerful digital media tools such as Plus! Voice Command, which lets users control Windows Media Player simply by speaking; Plus! Speaker Enhancement, which dramatically improves the sound of many common desktop speakers; and a variety of stunning 3-D visualizations, screen savers and games. Plus! for Windows XP is available in stores.
Windows Media is the leading digital media platform, providing unmatched audio and video quality to consumers, content providers, solution providers and software developers as well as business, education and government users. Windows Media offers the industrys only integrated rights-management solution and the most scalable and reliable streaming technology tested by independent labs. Windows Media Technologies includes Windows Media Player for consumers, Windows Media Services for servers, Windows Media Tools for content creation, and the Windows Media Software Development Kit for software developers. Windows Media Player, available in 26 languages, is the fastest-growing media player. More information about Windows Media can be found at .
The VLC Media Player is an open source, cross-platform media client that supports the vast majority of media formats. One of the great features is that it supports skins that work across different platforms. This article will cover installing on both linux and windows. You will first need to download the skin named WMP11 from the skins page. This skin looks a lot like Windows Media Player 11. It's not exact, but it's a pretty good skin. To install on Ubuntu Linux: Hit Alt+F2 to bring up the run dialog, and type in this:
This will bring up the player in the right mode to let you install new skins. Right click on the title bar area and choose Select Skin \ Open Skin, and choose the skin file that you have downloaded.
That's pretty much all there is to it. To install on Windows: Select the "VLC media player (skins)" option from the Start menu program group. This will start VLC in the right mode to select skins.
The trends I'm talking about here are the increasingly pervasive presence of the Internet, the plummeting price of processing and storage, the rise of faster and cheaper data communication links, and the convergence of digital media and computing. The core technologies of this 'digital fabric' will be communication and processing, presented to the user in the guise of entertainment: video, television, and music.
A digital fabric is, quite simply, an environment where processors and storage can communicate seamlessly, and where programs can be distributed across whichever processors are available. Computers as such could disappear because everything will be a computer. A true digital fabric is clearly some way off, because getting any program to run on any processor is no easy task (but see Virtual Chips box).
Amir manages a group of 700 people. As part of the Windows group (as opposed to the group that writes applications like the Microsoft Office suite), they are responsible for digital audio and video under the Windows platform. Their brief includes developing digital audio and video codecs, now brought together under the heading of Windows Media, and promoting the use of Windows Media by liaising with content providers (such as Sony) and application developers (such as Sonic Foundry).
It's worth going into Windows Media Audio 7 (WMA7) in some detail because, through its host, Windows Media Player 7, we are going to see a lot of it, especially given the seemingly insatiable interest in streamed and downloaded audio. Please note that I don't carry any particular brief for Microsoft (and would refer you to my coverage of BeOS, in SOS April 2000, in case you think I do!) but that doesn't stop me thinking that WMA7 is important.
Alongside the 3D enhancement is bass enhancement using a process that 'implies' the presence of bass rather than simply boosting it. This is quite effective, especially with small speakers, but I'm not sure what effect all of this processing would have on a pure, simple sound stage, such as a string quartet. I'm also rather concerned about the way it might interact with audio that has already been enhanced. If you enhance 'enhanced' audio, something has to give. Anyway, you can always turn it off.
So, although most people will buy them for playing their MP3 files, they will virtually all be able to play WMA7 as well. And, of course, WMA7 is easy to copy onto portable players, normally via a Compact Flash card. When I suggested to Amir that, as most portable music file players sport a soft codec capability, people would tend to use whichever codecs were around, he became defensive, saying that two or three codecs were the maximum that people would ever want or could be bothered with. I suspect that a world where players can use any codec, where that codec needn't necessarily be Microsoft's, is not what Microsoft is aiming for.
Microsoft is clearly hoping that WMA7 will become the new MP3. On the face of it they have everything in their favour: Windows is, by a very large margin, the most popular operating system. WMA7 sounds better than MP3 at the same bit rate and for the same quality it takes up half the amount of precious flash RAM. And, unlike MP3, it can carry copy protection.
I can't help feeling that to understand the scale of the copyright problem we all face, as users and creators of music, we need to look in the direction of human nature rather to individual technologies. I wouldn't want computers and music players that only work sometimes. But I would happily pay, probably hundreds of pounds a year, for the ability to legally and responsibly copy music from the Internet. Especially if the files were of a high quality and were guaranteed to play anywhere I wanted.
Even if the IBM Microdrive didn't have any possible relevance to readers of Sound On Sound I'd still be looking for an excuse to write about it because, quite simply, it's amazing and brilliant in equal measures. Do you know how much 16 grammes is? It's about the weight of a letter containing your bank statement. It's also the weight of a 1Gb hard disk.
Now for the really good bit. There's enough room for an hour and a half of CD quality audio or 15 hours of MP3 (that's thirty hours of WMA7) and this thing is a quarter the size of a Minidisc. You could, by definition, fit Gigasampler's grand piano onto one, or thousands of ordinary samples. It's hard to communicate quite how tiny the Microdrive is: compare, for example, the expansion cards