Windows XP Media Center Edition reviewed A remote-capable ten foot user interface to digital media and television tasks
In January 2002, I got my first look at Microsoft's Freestyle software--a remote-friendly front-end to digital media tasks--and immediately wanted it. Back then, of course, it was unclear how the software would be delivered, and I had hoped that any XP user would be able to get Freestyle through a cheap, Plus!-type add-on. However, in the days since January, Microsoft decided to ship Freestyle as Windows XP Media Center Edition (XP MCE), which will be made available solely with powerful new PCs, logically dubbed media center PCs. While I understand the reasoning behind this decision, I still have my doubts, since there is a large crowd of digital media enthusiasts who might have paid $50 for an add-on package but have no interest in shelling out $1800 or more for a new PC, just to get this software.
So what is XP MCE?
Essentially, it's Windows XP Professional Service Pack 1 (SP1) with an
additional application,
As noted in my Freestyle preview, the first iteration of XP MCE is geared
toward small living spaces, such as a college dorm, apartment, or children's
room, where a PC might be an acceptable alternative to a TV, and be used as a
complete, all-in-one entertainment center. That is, you could use the PC,
normally, with a mouse and keyboard to interact with applications like Word and
Internet Explorer (IE), as you would with any PC. But when you wanted to watch
or record TV, consume music, photos, or digital movies in a more comfortable
fashion than is normally possible with a PC, or watch a DVD movie, 535w2217f you can grab
the remote control--included with every media center PC--and sit back in a
chair and interact with the computer from ten feet away.
I don't live in such a place, however, and I wanted to see how XP MCE stood up
as a consumer electronics device. Which is to say, I've been using a prototype
HP media center PC in my living room, attached to a 48" rear projection TV
set; it's not used like a computer, but rather as a combination TiVo, video
game machine, and DVD player. My family has used XP MCE to watch TV and DVD
movies, record TV using the product's integrated digital video recording
features, listen to music, watch photo slideshows, and even play some Quake III
Arena.
However, it's important to remember that a media center PC is a PC, and a very
powerful PC at that. The prototype hardware I tested included a 1.8 GHz Pentium
4 processor, 256 MB of RAM, a powerful NVIDIA graphics card, and a large hard
drive. This isn't a set-top box. This PC, in fact, is every bit as powerful as
the PC I normally use day-to-day. This fact has many ramifications for the
Is Windows ready for the living room? Let's take a look.
The Windows Media Center interface (Figure) is designed solely to
consume digital media. That is, you can't use
As such, setting up a media center PC is pretty difficult. The beta units came
with a bizarre assortment of hardware, some of which you had to use in order to
get it working, while others you had to ignore; I'll be interested in seeing
how the final hardware works. Because I wanted to use the media center PC as a
consumer electronics device, I disconnected my DVD player, and got to work
integrating the HP PC into my den.
This involved a number of cable attachments and configuration settings. In my
case, I wasn't connecting a PC monitor, so the display was driven through the
hybrid S-Video Out port (it can drive a composite signal as well, using an
adapter) on the bundled Hauppauge TV tuner card. My digital cable box was
re-routed through the Hauppauge as well--using coaxial cabling--and I had to
install Microsoft's custom IR blaster to the front of the cable box so the
remote control could, well, control it. If you've ever used a TiVo or Replay
device, you're familiar with the slow performance of this sort of control. When
you hit the Up Channel button on the remote, for example, the DVR actually
inputs the channel number directly above the one you're currently watching,
followed by the "Enter" command. Then, the information is slowly
transmitted to the cable box and, finally, the channel changes; you can't just
sit there hitting Up Channel as you could in the old days. If you're not familiar
with DVRs, you might find the resulting slow performance infuriating. However,
it's not any slower than a TiVo or Replay device.
Once the hardware connection was made, and I could boot the device on the TV
set, I moved right to setting up the networking configuration, which is crucial
for XP MCE, since it uses the Internet to get TV programming guide information.
And, as a PC, XP MCE will also use the Internet for whatever tasks XP
Professional does: For example, accessing Windows Update, Auto Update, CD and
DVD information in Windows Media Player, and so on.
Unlike many potential media center PC purchasers, I've already got an extensive
home network set up. So I connected the PC, temporarily, via 100 Mbs Ethernet
cable and copied over my music and photo libraries from the server, so I could
access them locally as a typical consumer might (of course, a typical consumer
would also need to manually create these libraries, but I've already spent time
doing this in Windows XP). Then, I added one of Microsoft's USB-based Broadband
Networking adapters and disconnected the Ethernet cable.
Because the Media Center application will consume any photo, music, and video
libraries you have already created, they were instantly accessible through the
new interface, though I'll discuss that below. One crucial feature that isn't
immediately available, however, is the TV functionality, which needs to be
configured with your specific hardware and locale information. Microsoft
supplies a friendly but lengthy wizard for this process, and you can access it
later through the My Settings menu section, also discussed in detail below.
From there, it's simply a matter of using
Using
the
As
noted in my preview, the
The remote features a Start button for launching the
You can use the remote for navigating around Windows somewhat as well. The
navigational buttons can move from button to button in a dialog box, for
example, the Cancel button can cancel a dialog button, and the Select button
works as OK, or Enter on your keyboard. Likewise, you can use your keyboard and
mouse to navigate the
The main
My
TV
Arguably, most consumers are going to spend most of their
To watch TV in full screen mode, simply hit the TV/Jump button and you're in.
From here, TV is similar to the experience you might have had previously with
cable or satellite TV. However, there are many improvements, and we've come to
greatly appreciate a few of these features. For example, you can pause live TV
(Figure). This is handy in a number
of situations, such as when the phone rings, someone comes to the door, or as
is so often the case in my house, our young daughter wakes up crying and needs
attention.
The Media Center Guide (Figure) is wonderful and, unlike
the other TV functionality supplied by the OS, quite a speedy performer. The
Guide is loaded periodically from the Internet and stored locally, which might
account for the performance gains. However, the channel numbers are laid out
backwards, so that the higher numbers are at the bottom of the screen. This
leads the illogical act of pressing the Up key on the remote to move down in
the channel list. The Guide also includes a small picture-in-picture display,
so you can continue to watch live TV as you browse around, and a handful of
small ads, similar to what you might see on a Web page. However, unlike
programming subscription info from TiVo or Replay, the Microsoft Guide is
completely free, a huge improvement over rival products. Thus, this feature
beats out any of the consumer electronics competition, though of course the
underlying hardware purchase price is considerably higher.
The Recorded TV section of the My TV module lets you manage your recorded
television shows. Here, you can view programs you've already recorded--such as
the plethora of Scooby-Doo episodes my son craves (Figure)--look through the pending
recordings you've scheduled, and configure recordings. Recordings can be
manual--simply hit the remote's Record button once while watching live TV, and
the current show will be recorded--or more intelligent. For example, you can
navigate through the Program Guide, select a show you'd like to record, and hit
the Record button once. This will display a single red circle on the show in
the Guide (Figure), indicating that the show
will be recorded. Hit the Record button twice, and you can record a series;
this displays a series of red circles in the Guide (Figure). By default,
It's also worth
mentioning that recordings you make with Media Center can be backed up to
recordable DVD, or copied over a network, and used on other XP SP1-based PCs
with Windows Media 9 Series. Originally, Microsoft had planned to disallow this
functionality, due to piracy concerns, but its customers complained enough that
the feature was restored. Recordings are stored as regular files in the
Recorded TV folder under Shared Documents. More information about this
functionality is available in my new Technology Showcase, Copying Content in Windows XP Media Center
Edition.
Media Center's TV Search section is one of the weak points. On our AT&T
digital cable set top box, my four year old son had learned how to navigate the
box's menu system, and could find children's programming with its Search
functionality. On Media Center, Search is designed for one purpose, and one
purpose only: To find shows to record. What you can't do with it is find shows
that are on right now. So, sadly, my son is unable to find children's shows
that are on right now, pick one, and watch it. Microsoft admits that this is a
limitation, and the company will probably fix this problem in a 2003 software
update. You can search by show name or keyword (Figure), however, and if finding
shows to record is what you're after, it works fine.
Overall, the TV functionality in Media Center is superb, with a few glitches.
My
Music
The My Music module (Figure) is fairly straightforward,
offering simple access to audio CD music you've copied to the hard drive with
Windows Media Player. The main view displays recently played music, and you can
access your music library via Albums (Figure), Artists (Figure), playlists, or genres.
Like other modules, My Music includes a small picture-in-picture window, which
can display live or recorded TV, a photo slideshow, a DVD movie, or a digital
video, whichever you happened to be viewing before you entered this part of the
UI.
Where My Music excels is in its gorgeous displays. You can view an album via
song list (Figure) or per song (Figure), both of which are
attractive. You can also integrate a music playlist with a photo slideshow,
which we'll discuss in the next section. Being a Microsoft product, you can
even buy related music online (Figure), and this is one of the
many places the Media Center interface breaks down: When you choose this
option, the Media Center resizes and an IE window loads, bringing you to the
Windows Media Web site (Figure). Yuck.
Also like other modules, My Music includes a basic search feature (Figure), but it doesn't seem to
offer much beyond artist search.
Overall, the music functionality in Media Center is attractive and fun, with no
major disadvantages beyond the fact that you'll need to use XP's built-in tools
to copy audio CDs, and create playlists, two skills that might be beyond typical
consumers' capabilities. I'd like to see these functions brought into the Media
Center for a future release.
My
Pictures
Like My Music, My Pictures (Figure) is designed solely to
consume a particular type of digital media, in this case digital photos and
other pictures. It integrates with your My Pictures and Shared Pictures
folders, and lets you view photo slideshows, of individual folders or your
entire collection. The effect is wonderful, even mesmerizing if you have a
bunch of personal photos, as I do (Figure), stored on the computer.
What makes it even better is the way you can integrate a music playlist with a
photo slideshow: Just queue up an album, artist or genre playlist in the My
Music module, switch to My Pictures, and start up a slideshow: The music will
play in the background as you watch the slideshow full-screen (Figure).
What's amazing here is how universally enjoyable this feature is. Scoff if you
will at the modern equivalent of a gathering the family around the slide
projector, but there's something very compelling about the randomness of the
images that appear. I've been taking digital photos for over two years now, and
I've got thousands of images from family events and vacations, work trips and
trade shows, and other events, and as the images fade in and out you never know
what's coming next. It's quite neat. You can control the slideshow through a
basic UI (Figure) as well, changing the
transition time, and determining whether it displays images randomly, or
utilizes subfolders.
Curious as it sounds, this one feature is always the big hit when I show off
the media center PC to friends and relatives, most of whom aren't technophiles.
My
Videos
The My Videos module (Figure) will probably be the most
under-utilized portion of the Media Center interface, since it comes with the
most baggage. To fully utilize this feature, you will need a DV or analog
camera for recording home movies, the know-how to use a video editing
application such as Movie Maker, and the time and desire to make and edit your
own home movies. That said, you can save such movies in your XP My Videos
folder and access them through the My Videos module in Media Center if you'd
like.
Digital movies work just like any broadcast TV program or DVD movie, in that
you can pause, stop, play, rewind, and fast forward through them. The movies
play full-screen by default (Figure), and the quality will
naturally vary according to the source material.
Digital home movie making is only now coming into its own, and hopefully
consumers will start taking advantage of some of the exciting possibilities in
this market. In the meantime, I decided to keep my own home movies out of the
media center PC for space reasons: I didn't want to clog up the hard drive with
the many GB's of movies I've created, and opted to use that space for recorded
TV shows. If this were my only PC, I'd get a second hard drive dedicated solely
to home movies.
Play
DVD
The Play DVD module lets you interact with DVD movies (Figure) using the same pleasant UI
Microsoft provided for the TV and digital video modules. This means you can
pause (Figure), stop, and navigate
through DVD movies, and do all the other sorts of tasks you'd expect. The HP
media center PC uses the excellent Intervideo DVD decoder to supply DVD
playback, and the performance is top notch. We never witnessed any of the sorts
of glitches I've come to expect from laptop-based DVD playback.
One other nicety is that the DVD playback uses the Internet to retrieve title
and chapter information about the movie you're watching. So as you skip around
the movie using the remote, you'll see the current chapter heading, as well as
the movie title, onscreen. Good stuff.
Settings
In the Settings module, you configure such things as appearance, UI sounds, the
remote, your Internet connection, TV and DVD settings, recorder settings, and
so on. Many of these settings are available in the various other modules, and
some are presented when you first set up the media center PC. Most of it is
pretty straightforward, though a few options trigger IE or even a Windows
dialog box, which can be disconcerting.
Where
Theory and Reality Collide: Problems with the Media Center
And that, really, is the overall problem with XP Media Center: Too often, the
underlying OS peeks through, which can be off-putting when you're sitting on
the couch holding a remote (though I did end up purchasing a wireless keyboard
and mouse for the media center PC as well). In other cases, the underlying OS
is simply required, for example, if you insert a new CD that you'd like to
copy, as there's no way to do this from the Media Center UI.
In the end, the Media Center interface is most clearly defined by the fact that
it is part of Windows XP, and running on a real PC. This isn't a true consumer
electronics device, in that, yes, it does crash (Figure), and I occasionally had to
reboot the system to get things working again, leading to explanations about
why I was "rebooting the TV," which didn't go over to well with my
wife. Other times, we'd be watching TV and there would be a small glitch, and
then the voices were "off" from the actor's lips, maybe by a second
or two. This was infuriating, and often led to me shutting down, and then
restarting, the Media Center interface (which worked).
In fact, before I received the final software build, my wife was ready to chuck
the whole system, due to various bizarre issues. However, most of these
problems--aside from those I mentioned above--were fixed by the final release.
I'm looking forward to the final hardware, however, to see how it all comes
together. But my cable set-top box and DVD player have never crashed, not once.
XP Media Center needs to reach this level of stability before its going to be a
viable option for most consumers. I'd rather see the stability of the consumer
electronics device world make its way into the PC world, rather than the
reverse.
I also have concerns about how this system will perform in the real world, when
it's being used as a real computer. Will it stand up to simultaneous Quake III
deathmatches and DVR recording sessions, for example, or any other combination
of high bandwidth activities? I don't know, and though Microsoft assures me
these scenarios have been successfully tested, I have yet to do so myself.
Other concerns include the price--because media center PCs are high-end computers,
they will come at a premium--and the fact that digital media enthusiasts, who
already own high-end PCs, won't be able to get the software separately. While I
understand why Microsoft decided to go the integrated route--which, frankly, is
complicated enough as it is--I still feel that they're leaving a large market
untapped by this decision. The company knows this, however, and things could
change in the future. In 2003, for example, XP Media Center will get a fairly
major software update, other PC makers will come on board, and Microsoft will
begin targeting other markets, including Europe, with the new version. Time
will tell if a software-only solution, or perhaps an inexpensive package
including the software and remote--will eventually be made available to
consumers. I hope so.
Timing and Delivery
Windows XP Media Center Edition has been finalized, and Hewlett-Packard media
center PCs should begin shipping by the third week of October 2002. I'll report
back on the hardware when I receive a unit later this month, and certainly the
stability of the final system could be much higher than what I observed with
the beta machine.
HP media center PCs will retail for $1300 to $2000. The high-end version features a recordable DVD drive and a 5 speaker stereo system.
Conclusions
I really enjoy using Windows XP Media Center Edition, and despite some glitches
and missing functionality, no one in my family would be happy to see the media
center PC go. We've come to really appreciate the DVR functionality,
especially, and the seamless way it has totally changed our TV viewing habits.
On that note, I don't feel that Media Center is a good solution for people with
decent PCs who are looking to add DVR functionality in the den. However, for
the market Microsoft is targeting with this first release--those with limited
living spaces--the media center PC is an excellent all-around solution, and an
exciting advance on the digital media experiences the company bundled with
Windows XP. I just wish, again, that the Media Center software was made
available to a wider audience.
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