RealPlayer, formerly RealAudio Player, RealOne Player and RealPlayer G2, is a cross-platform media player app, developed by RealNetworks. The media player is compatible with numerous container file formats of the multimedia realm, including MP3, MP4, QuickTime File Format, Windows Media format, and the proprietary RealAudio and RealVideo formats.[7] RealPlayer is also available for other operating systems; Linux, Unix, Palm OS, Windows Mobile, and Symbian versions have been released.
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The first version of RealPlayer was introduced on April 3, 1995 as "RealAudio Player" and was one of the first media players capable of streaming media over the Internet. Then, version 4.01 of RealPlayer was included as a selectable Internet tool in Windows 98's installation package.[9] Subsequent versions of the software were titled "RealPlayer G2" (version 6) and "RealOne Player" (version 9), while free "Basic" versions as well as paid "Plus" versions, the latter with additional features, have also been offered. For the Windows OS, the RealPlayer version 9 subsumed the features of the separate program, RealJukebox.
RealPlayer 11 was released for Microsoft Windows in November 2007 and for Mac OS X in May 2008. RealPlayer 15 was released on November 18, 2011. This version allowed users to transfer video, music, and photos between their computers and mobile devices, share links of videos and photos on sites such as Facebook and MySpace, and download videos from popular sites such as YouTube and Metacafe.
RealPlayer was initially accessed by many users as a plugin to watch streaming video or listen to streaming audio (for example, most of the BBC's websites formerly employed the plugin);[10] but in the early 21st century, Adobe Flash and subsequently HTML video became preferred options for this purpose.
In February 2016, RealNetworks released RealPlayer 18, which incorporated the features of the previous year's release of RealTimes, an app that makes multimedia montages from users' photographs and videos, backed up and accessible via cloud storage. The Real.com Blog states that "RealPlayer with RealTimes (aka "RealPlayer" for short) will still include the legacy features, such as Downloader, Converter, and Web Videos. It will also still include our RealTimes features, such as Photos and RealTimes Stories, our automatic video collage feature."[11] Note that as of 2018, the publisher only provides RealTime for use on a Mac and no longer publishes a media player called RealPlayer for macOS.
Features of RealPlayer include a video download utility, a web browser, visualizations (graphical animations or "light shows" that appear on the screen when playing music), equalizer and video controls (including Crossfade and Gapless playback in RealPlayer Plus), recording audio, CD ripping, and a media converter which allows converting files to a variety of common audio and video formats.
RealPlayer SP includes audio CD burning capabilities, DVR-style playback buffering, multimedia search, Internet radio, a jukebox-style file library, an embedded web browser (using Microsoft Internet Explorer), and the ability to convert and transfer media to a wide range of devices. This includes music players such as iPod and Zune, smartphones such as iPhone and BlackBerry, portable gaming devices such as Sony PSP, and console gaming systems such as Xbox 360, PS3, and Wii. Since version 11, RealPlayer SP has gained Flash Video support, DVD, SVCD, VCD burning (120-minute), and video recording (DRM is supported).
As of 2008, RealPlayer Enterprise is a licensed product for enterprise applications which can be customized and remotely administered by RealPlayer Enterprise Manager.[47] The free Realplayer Enterprise Education Edition has been removed.[48] Both versions of Realplayer Enterprise are lightweight, ad-free versions of RealPlayer, missing most consumer features and most plug-in support. The RealSched.exe update reminder can be disabled in two steps, and it is not reinstalled upon running the player.
The last stable release as of July 2010[update] included Real's Helix playback engine for RealAudio and RealVideo, a 10-band equalizer and video adjustment controls, and a full-screen, resizable "theater mode" for video playback, as well as many features found in its Windows counterpart.
RealPlayer for Linux/Unix was developed separately from the Windows and Mac versions. [citation needed] The client is based on the open-source Helix Player which can be found at the Helix Community Website Archived July 26, 2011, at the Wayback Machine. It supports Windows Media 7/8, RealAudio/Video, MP3 and Ogg Vorbis. The interface depends on the current GTK+ theme.
The Symbian version of RealPlayer allows mobile phones to play Real Audio, Real Video, MP3, 3GP, AMR, and other media formats. It is provided as freeware. In newer Symbian devices it can also be used to stream both audio and video content in the form of MP3 (music) and 3GP (videos).
RealPlayer 1.6.1 (US) or RealPlayer 1.6.0 (worldwide) is available for free for PalmOne-made Palm OS 5 devices, such as the Palm Tungsten or Zire series.[54] It is also compatible with RealPlayer Music Store tracks. However, they will neither install nor run on non-PalmOne-made devices like Sony's Clie line of PDAs. Realplayer for Palm OS does not support later Palm smartphones such as the treo 700p, 755p, or Centro, although the treo 600 and 650 are listed as supported devices.
RealJukebox was a media player that allowed users to play and manage their digital music on hard drives, CDs and online. It was first released in May 1999. By late 2001, the functions of RealJukebox, RealPlayer and GoldPass (a subscription webcast service) had been integrated into Real's newly released all-in-one media player, RealOne Player.[55]
Past versions of RealPlayer have been criticized for containing adware and spyware[56] such as Comet Cursor.[57] In 1999 security researcher Richard M. Smith dissected some of RealJukebox's network traffic and discovered that it was sending a unique identifier with information about the music titles to which its users were listening.[58][59] RealNetworks issued a patch, and the spyware was removed[60] in version 1.02. Their download page stated RealJukebox included privacy enhancements and supplied the link to their updated privacy policy.[61]
1)) RP shows up twice in the list with applications and in the list with files to be deleted, While I only see one entry in Winapp2.ini. Is this the result of remnants of a previous version in the registry of somewhere on my laptop ? Or is there a special program code that's dedicated to RP ?
2)) When I run CC for the first time and RP is running then CC seems to detect that "RP 20" is still running but CC won't ask me to close the program. But at the same time it doesn't mind that "RP" is running and shows the amount of files to be deleted (red rectangle)
- So "RP 20" is "build in" in the program code ? The build-in script for "RP 20" seems to be doing slightly less cleaning than the other "RP" entry. And they both seem to target the same folders/files. That's why CC overstates the amount of files & diskspace to be freed in this one particualr case.
I was just noting that the asterisked entry is from Winapp2 - and that Winap2 is currently going through changes.
So because of those changes you may now be seeing something different from what you are used to seeing.
I know that with my cleaners for portable web browsers for example Firefox Portable it just lists "Skipped", probably because it isn't an installed version and isn't coded to deal directly with a portable.
It will just show 'skipped' in the results like it does there in your screenshot.
And it's easy to forget that at sometime in the past you have ticked 'Do not show me this message again' for a particular item.
So at some time in the past you have told CCleaner not to ask again about closing if Real Player 20/20 is running, so it's just been skipped.
Presumably 'old' Real Player wasn't running so it got cleaned - or if you don't still have the older RP installed then it could be a glitch in the modified winapp2.
Real Player and Real Player 20/20 are seperate apps and so it is possible to have both installed, do you have both installed?
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- No, I didn't install both versions. I installed 1st the older version and then when a new version of RP was released I installed the newer version. I assume that the new installation differs (slightly) from the older version. Different registry entries and/or files ? If you're interested I still have the original installation files of both RP versions. (I always keep a copy of the last say 5 versions of RP).
- But the "RP" entry does never ask that one question. That entry simply always seem to clean the RP related files. As said before the amount and size of the "RP" files to be deleted is about the same as the amount & size of the "RP 20" files.
- I must confess that I didn't like the GUI of the 2 latest versions of RP and went back to the version before that. I still have the last 5 or 6 original RP installation files (I know how to find those original RP installation files. Just look, after installation, for a program called "setup.exe". with a size of about 65 MB).
- As mentioned before: This one question "RP 20 needs to be closed ............ " doesn't show up the 1st time I run CC after starting my laptop. When I close and restart CC, then CC will ask that one question when I let CC analyze my laptop for the 1st time. When I close RP (then the process "Realplay.exe" disappears) then CC doesn't complain about closing RP. See the 2 pictures attached.
- I also have MS Edge installed. As a result a few processes called "MSEdgeWebview2.exe" (see also the picture above) are running all the time. But somehow one of this processes is preventing CC from removing a few files (e.g. Data_1, Data_2, Data_3, .............. ) that are located in the following path:
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