Wednesday, February 27, 2008
Grahm Skee vs. Windows Media Player 11: FIGHT!
Posted by Jason Dunn in "Digital Home Talk" @ 01:30 PM
- Dynamically resize album art: if I have big 800 x 800 album art, resize it to the Now Playing window using high-quality bicubic scaling so the quality is retained.
- Codec/DirectShow Support: Support for Divx and h.264 is a must, and a radically more user-friendly codec install routine is also crucial. Right now when someone downloads a video or audio file and it doesn’t play, they think Windows Media Player sucks – they don’t understand codecs (nor should they have to).
- Don’t show me ReadyBoost devices as on the left pane (best case scenario), or let me right-click on the device and let me permanently hide it (worst case scenario). If something is flagged by the system as a ReadyBoost device, it’s probably not also storing music…
- Performance: I was browsing my library, which consists of about 12,000 tracks, and even on a Core 2 Duo 2.9 Ghz system with 3 GB of RAM and a 15,000 RPM Raptor drive, the performance of the library during scroll and seeking functions was a bit sluggish. Much, much better than WMP10, but more improvements are needed. Even changing the window size of WMP11 is sluggish.
- Album Art: I embed my album art, 600 x 600 JPGs, and 99% of it comes from scans I did of my 800+ CDs. Yes, I really like high-quality album art. The fact that Windows Media Player traffics in low-quality, overly compressed, crappy looking album art is a source of constant frustration for me. WMP12 should recognize that when album art is embedded, there’s no reason to do the extraction and saving of the album art externally. Furthermore, external album art is like having externalized EXIF data for a JPEG image – it just doesn’t make sense.
- More aggressive content refreshing locally and on a network resource: I’d like to know that when I rip a new CD and put it on my Windows Home Server it will show up in my library within a minute or less. The Zune software is GREAT at finding new library content.
- Insane CPU Usage: Just today I had WMP11 open, and it was using 90%+ of my total CPU resources. No, it wasn't transcoding anything in the background - it was either the remote scanning of my shared media folder, or the media library scanning from my Windows Home Server. Either way, it's frustrating to have to shut down the program and re-start it "just because".
- Lots of stupid little bugs such as anything with a genre of "A Capella" being re-named to "A capella a Capella".












