Microsoft angers users by cutting Media Center
out of Windows 8
Microsoft's decision to charge
extra for the Windows 8 Media
Center and DVD playback
is not sitting well with users judging from responses to the company's blog.
HukumHAM
- Microsoft
has given Windows users yet another reason to complain.
The company revealed yesterday that Media Center will not be built into Windows 8 despite past assurances that it would
be part of the new OS. Instead, users of the Windows 8 Professional edition
will have to pony up money for a Media Center Pack. Those running the basic
version of Windows 8 will have to pay for a Windows 8 Pro Pack just to get Media Center .
The lack of Media
Center also means that
DVD playback won't natively be available in Windows 8 since that option won't
be part of Windows Media Player. Users who want to play DVDs will either have
to pay for the upgrade or rely on third-party utilities.
Many of the people responding to Microsoft's blog discussing
the decision are none too happy.
Some are upset over the loss of Media Center .
Others are griping about the inability to play DVDs. And several just seem
confused, as evidenced by the comments below.
This
is another extraordinarily bad move with Windows 8. What will happen to people
who upgrade from Windows 7? Will the lose
the ability to playback DVD's with Windows Media Player? Will they lose Windows
Media Centre? What happens to their recorded TV shows? What about their
schedules, libraries? Media Centre Extenders?
Even
worse is the decision around DVD. You're telling me that my Dad could go and
buy a brand new Windows 8 machine, with a DVD drive, and not be able to play a
DVD? Tell me why he wouldn't just go and buy a Mac.
This
packaging is VERY confusing. If I buy Win8Pro, I don't have Media Center .
If I buy Win8 and upgrade to Pro, then I have it. What?!? This really is a
shame because you have finally streamlined the packaging, and now this...I also
find it quite absurd that Win8 will not support DVD playback out of the box,
whereas Win7 did. Really???
And I find myself also troubled by the decision. But it's not so
much the move to charge extra for Media
Center that bothers me.
I don't use Media
Center that often, so I
probably won't miss it much. And the lack of native DVD playback in Windows 8
isn't a huge concern. I rarely play DVDs on my desktop though I do on my
laptop. But several third-party DVD programs are available, many of which come
bundled for free with new PCs.
And I understand that Microsoft is facing higher costs for video
codecs and didn't want to pass along those costs to all Windows consumers.
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Instead, it's more the backtracking on Microsoft's part that's
disturbing.
The company raised concerns among users last year that Media Center
would be missing in action from Windows 8, especially since it was absent from
the initial builds.
Windows Live President Steven Sinofsky said last September that Media Center would indeed be part of Windows 8, and in fact,
the feature is built into the beta version, aka the Consumer Preview.
But Sinofsky's comment in a September 2011 blog that "I want to reassure customers that Media Center will definitely be
part of Windows 8" was
disingenuous at best in light of yesterday's revelation.
I wish Microsoft had come clean in the first place and cautioned
users that Media Center and DVD playback would not be
built into Windows 8. By springing the news at this point, Microsoft makes
itself look bad and gives users yet another reason to avoid moving to Windows 8. *** JMart ***
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