Try Windows Media Center - you may already have it!

If your PC is running Windows Vista Home Premium or Windows Vista Ultimate, you have a great feature set you may not even know about: Windows Media Center.

Windows Media Center can turn your PC from a "plain vanilla" computer into something pretty powerful and impressive: the hub of your entertainment system.  Surprised?  Well (if you ask nicely), I'll tell you more.

Use Windows Media Center to browse your music collection by cover art or year, organize photos and create albums and jazz up custom slide shows with music.  If you're a sports fan, you'll definitely want to check out your favorite team's scores and stats on SportsLounge (U.S. and Canada only).

SportsLounge 

And if you like movies and TV, you'll enjoy Internet TV Beta. This new feature allows you to play free streaming video content on demand, choosing from more than 100 hours of TV entertainment, music concerts, movie trailers, news, and sports content from MSN Video.

Are you a film buff?  If so, you're in luck.  Windows Media Center, you can watch movies on DVD and stream or download movies from a growing list of content providers through Online Media-an innovative portal that helps you find movies over the Internet.  If you want a quick glimpse of all the movies you've recorded or the movies coming up on TV, check out the Movies Guide. You can see movie jackets, search for films by actor, director, genre, or title, and read descriptions and reviews of the films.

TV features are some of the most exciting in Windows Media Center.  You can watch, pause, and rewind live TV shows in standard and high definition (HDTV available only in the U.S.)1. Schedule recordings with the Electronic Programming Guide and find shows in the Windows Media Center Recorded TV library using picture thumbnails from the actual programs. You can also view live TV through Picture-in-Picture or as a background while performing other activities in Windows Media Center.

 Electronic Programming Guide  

Want to save what you've recorded?  No problem.  Go ahead and burn your favorite shows to DVD.  Windows Media Center will even create a simple DVD menu, which you can navigate using your DVD remote.

Right about now, you're probably thinking "Hey, this sounds pretty good - but I'll bet set-up is complicated."  Not so!  A TV tuner is all you need to start enjoying live TV on your Windows Vista Home Premium or Windows Vista Ultimate PC.2  Just plug your TV antenna, cable, or the video output from your satellite set-top box into your TV tuner, open Windows Media Center, and follow the appropriate set-up instructions.  To find out what else you need to perform specific functions in Windows Media Center, take a look at the handy chart here.

Some Windows Media Center users like to stream their digital media throughout the house.  If that appeals to you, Extenders for Windows Media Center are just the ticket.  And here's a tip:  If you have an Xbox 360, you already have a first-rate extender available.

1 Enjoying live and recorded HD content may require additional equipment, including but not limited to an HD compatible receiver, tuner, set-top box, and TV or other display.

2 Windows Media Center supports as many as two NTSC Standard tuners and two ATSC HD TV tuners, for a maximum of four TV tuners in a Windows Media Center PC but not limited to an HD compatible receiver, tuner, set-top box, and TV or other display.


Comments

  1. Posted on: December 10, 2007 at 9:33AM  

    The only thing missing in the sport section is the cricket scores & stats.

    India has a cricket league which is new and probably could be incroportation into the media center sports section http://icl.msncricket.com/, if not the cricket info from the ICC. (Internation cricket council). Lot of people from Australia, India, England, Newzealand, Pakistan, Srilanka, West Indies watch lot of cricket.

    Cricket section would be huge plus.

  2. Posted on: December 12, 2007 at 12:10AM  

    I like media center but a feature that would make it truly extraordinary would be the ability to use another vista box as a media extender.  It would be great for instance to be able to use my laptop (over my lan) in another room to watch tv.  WebGuide is what I am currently using, but it would be great if it were an actual Microsoft product that did the extending, not someone else trying to extend Microsoft's products.

  3. Posted on: December 12, 2007 at 4:21PM  

    How does one turn off Windows Media Center in Vista Home Premium?  I don't use it and would like to disable it as I noticed there were processes in the background running for Media Center.

  4. Posted on: December 14, 2007 at 9:16PM  

    I love Media Center in my Vista Ultimate copy.

    Hovewer, I was very disappointed with the Internet TV feature. Here's why. My home country is Ukraine, but I work and live in US now. My PC is set to Russian locale, so all non-Unicode programs could show themselves properly (and, boy, it helps: Outlook for instance can't show russian-speaking Yahoo! Groups properly with locale being set to US). For some reason Windows Vista uses locale to determine the availability of the services. C'mon, guys: I live in US, I bought my (US-English, not Russian, BTW) copy of Ultimate and now you're discriminating me just because I can't set locale to US!? The same thing with Weather Gadget for Sidebar, the same thing with Hold'em Poker extra. I think you HAVE TO reconsider such approach of detecting user's location.

  5. Posted on: December 15, 2007 at 8:56AM  

    in Italy nothing??

  6. Posted on: January 03, 2008 at 7:53AM  

    First of all, I think MS not really cares about media center users outside the US. Bad EPG data quality, no support for DVB-S pc-cards, no support for dealers selling mce pcs...

    Also I bought a XBOX360 only to use it as an extender. But I rather use a second pc to be able to stream dvds (kids do scratche dvds..) or browse the music library (which is very slow on xbox with its remote)...

    Anyway, for me MediaCenter looks nice but has too much limitations for a daily use in Europe.

    Christian

  7. Posted on: January 09, 2008 at 4:11PM  

    I might like the media center if it worked.  It did a fine job of searching my computer for pictures.  I can view every single folder that contains a photo, but not one photo (jpg).  All folders are empty.  It is hard for the layperson to use if it doesn't do what it is supposed to.  I have spent hours trying to figure it out.  Funny that all my photos are viewable in windows media player.

  8. Posted on: January 25, 2008 at 9:30AM  

    It would be a nice programm if i got it to work on my Vista computer.I am getting a constant error.Namely this one:

    Files needed to display video are not installed or not working correctly

    PLease could you help me

  9. Posted on: January 25, 2008 at 10:54AM  

    Do i need codecs to watch online tv and how do i add online tv-channels.All works fine except for online-tv

  10. Posted on: January 25, 2008 at 3:01PM  

    Why not make a choice of different  packages of online tv that you can install in your mediacenter and a fix for the problems.I googled al day today and found no solution to my problem:

    Files needed to display video are not installed or not working correctly.

    This only happened when i tried online tv.Also some online tvfiles couldn`t be found.

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