WMP 11 To Be Out By June

dipdude

Skilled
The software, which will be built into Vista, is designed to offer better synching with portable devices, make it easier to scroll through long libraries of music, and be tightly integrated with Urge, a new subscription and download music service co-developed by Microsoft and MTV Networks.

Microsoft is on track to release a Windows XP version of Windows Media Player 11 before the end of June, the company confirmed last week.

Microsoft has said the XP version won't have all the features of its Vista sibling, but the company won't say which features will be excluded. The company also has yet to offer a public test version of the software.

The Vista version, which has been in public testing for months, offers significant changes from the current version of the media-playing software, particularly when connecting to portable devices.


What's New :

With the new media player, consumers will be able to "reverse sync," meaning they can send content from a digital device to a PC. That will allow users to transfer pictures taken with their camera phone, or music purchased on a wireless device.

Other sync options include synching a player to multiple PCs and filling a device with random tracks--a la Shuffle in iTunes--according to a Windows Vista product guide that was briefly made available on the Internet last week.

Another change is the ability to alter protected music and video files to change their quality level. With the new software, protected Windows Media files can be converted to smaller file sizes for playback on mobile devices, where there is less need for very-high-quality video files.

Of course, the player that most people want to connect with is Apple Computer's iPod. And no, Windows Media Player 11 won't allow conversion of purchased Windows Media Songs into iTunes' proprietary FairPlay format. So songs bought from a Windows Media store still won't play on the iPod.

Updated Looks & Rights Management :

Media Player 11 also sports an updated look. Libraries can be viewed not just as an endless list of song tracks, but also using album art in stacks, an effect that looks a bit like a group of old record covers stacked one on top of another. Indexed searching allows users to quickly find whatever they're looking for just by typing a few letters, again borrowing a popular trick from iTunes.

Microsoft also tries to do a better job of showing what rights a user has to a particular song. With iTunes, customers own their music, and all of the tracks can be burned to a CD or transferred to an iPod. But Windows Media supports a number of different options.

Some tracks can be played on a PC but not burned to a CD or added to a portable player. Others can be put on a player but not burned, while still other tracks can be used in all three ways.

Urge Music Service :

It's still unclear which of these new features will be part of the XP incarnation of WMP 11. One thing that will definitely be included, Microsoft says, is the integrated Urge music service. Microsoft is hoping the new subscription service will help the company better compete with Apple's popular iTunes-iPod combination.

But with MTV, Microsoft may have found a partner that is willing to invest in a top-notch service, even if it can't make tons of money selling songs or music subscriptions.
 
Back
Top