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Windows
XP Media Center Edition ("Freestyle")
Preview
Extend the reach of Windows PCs to the Television
During the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in early
January 2002, Microsoft unveiled two technologies--code-named
Freestyle and Mira--designed to extend the reach of Windows PCs from the
office into the far larger and more lucrative living
room. The plan, launched through the company's eHome
Division, aims to leverage the power and intelligence of
the PC while offering simplicity and convenience for
consumers.
Currently, PCs are powerful, but limited to specific
tasks. As we move toward a more connected world where
digital media experiences such as music, photos, and
movies are used more and more with PCs, it makes sense
to bring that machine into other areas of the house.
Windows XP Media Center Edition ("Freestyle") addresses this need. With
Windows XP Media Center Edition, a new
generation of TV-based PCs, or PCs used in smaller
living areas such as dorm rooms and apartments, is made
more viable thanks to a simple new user interface.
Somewhat predictably, Microsoft calls these PCs Media Center PCs.
Windows XP Media Center
Edition will only be available from the few PC makers
that elect to ship Media Center PCs. The software is
basically Windows XP Professional Edition Service Pack 1
(SP1) with an optional digital media user interface
that's specifically designed for use with a remote
control. Since most of the OS is identical to XP Pro,
we'll focus on the digital media stuff in this preview. Let's take a look.
Freestyling into the Living
Room
I received my first
Windows XP Media Center Edition preview the morning before Gates' CES 2002 keynote address
and found myself immediately impressed. eHome Division general manager Kevin
Eagan told me that Freestyle builds on the foundational digital media technology in
Windows XP and enables a simple user interface for those digital media tasks that
can work with a remote control, rather than a keyboard and mouse.
"The PC is moving out of the home office and into
the den," Eagan told me. "It's a complete UI that separates the old 'two foot
interface' from the new, remote-enabled 'ten foot interface.' It extends the
attraction of the PC. The remote control is for 'consumption mode' but I don't
necessarily want to edit my home videos with it."
So Windows XP Media Center Edition provides a very simple user interface
(Figure) that obviously harkens back to the
standard XP interface style, which is not a surprise
since XP UI guru Joe Belfiore is now working for the eHome Division. Users can
connect a Media Center PC--available from Samsung and HP this year--to a television set and home stereo and use a
remote to view home videos (Figure), music
(Figure) and photos (Figure), watch DVD movies
(Figure), and program
Digital Video Recorder (DVR) capabilities (Figure) through a nice onscreen program guide (Figure). And
the DVR allows you to watch, pause, and record live TV like you would with a
TiVo or Ultimate TV device.
The key here, I think, is the interface and the
underlying power of the PC. The interface is simple yet stunning, and it seems
that Microsoft has really thought through all the tasks you'd want to perform.
For example, you can listen to a music playlist while displaying a photo
slideshow on the TV. What the PC brings is storage and versatility. You can
store your music, photos, and videos on its hard drive, and access network
resources as well, if you have other PCs at home elsewhere in the house.
For Windows XP Media Center Edition to successful, however, a new
generation of stereo component-like PCs will need to be created. Microsoft says
that these Media Center PCs are on the way.
"We're working with leading consumer PC makers
such as Hewlett-Packard, Samsng, and NEC and are very focused on delivering this
technology in consumer PCs," Eagan told me. "But XP provides a whole new
platform for reliable devices; we can build on top of and expand the ways we
can deliver experiences to consumers." In July 2002, eHome Vice President
Mike Toutonghi clarified the PC maker support. "HP and Samsung will release
Media Center PCs in time for Holiday 2002, in time for Christmas shopping," he
told me. "NEC will release a system in Japan next year."
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Updated Freestyle UI
shown during Jim Allchin's WinHEC 2002 keynote
address.
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Shipping Freestyle only as part of a new Windows
XP version is somewhat controversial. Toutonghi admitted that this was something
consumers would have to get used to. "We're shipping Freestyle as a new XP
version because it really pushes what's possible on modern video hardware, and
most users would have a bad experience if they tried to use it on their current
PCs." Microsoft really believes that Media Center PCs are a viable new business,
one that is best served by a specific Windows version.
Eagan told me that Microsoft had a two phase schedule for
rolling out the technology. First, during the current "anywhere in the room
phase," the company will expand PC relevance with a remote control interface so
that you can use a PC in your living room; this is the product that will ship in
late 2002. Then, the company will build on
networking features like 802.11b and power line networking to deliver rich
experiences anywhere in the room. The PC, he said, is key because it can offer
both security and entertainment. "Nowhere is innovation happening more rapidly
than with the home PC," he said. "It's gotta be plug and play, and offer an out
of box experience where the consumer can expect it to work easily, and just
start using it."
The Freestyle Hardware Dilemma
Originally expected to begin in
April 2002, the Freestyle beta was delayed until late June 2002. The problem,
Microsoft told me, is that Freestyle won't
even install on a PC that doesn't include TV tuner hardware and a specific IR hardware, which enables
the remote control compatibility. "If you think about it, we've been pretty
lucky until this point," said Aaron Woodman, the Lead Product Manager for
Consumer Vision and Strategy at Microsoft. "It's simple to distribute software
betas via CD or download. But Freestyle requires specific hardware."
Freestyle has been upgraded somewhat since January, however, to include keyboard
and mouse navigation and a windowed mode that allows the Freestyle UI to appear
in a normal application window on the XP desktop.
At the Windows Hardware
Engineering Conference (WinHEC) 2002 in April 2002, Microsoft announced that it
would be creating a reference design for the Freestyle remote control, the
Windows Remote Control, which
will feature a Windows button and specific Freestyle-related functionality. PC
makers that ship Freestyle machines will bundle such a remote. The beta remotes
I've seen do include a Start button, but overall the beta remotes are pretty
nondescript; that will change.
"The Windows Remote Control is designed for
freestyle UI, and it defines a set of buttons that users can count on," said
Mike Toutonghi, Windows eHome Corporate VP of the New Media Platforms Division
at Microsoft during a WinHEC presentation. "It's a reference design that
describes the mappings of specific buttons. We worked with the Philips RC6
infrared remote technology and will initiate a future logo program so that this
common IR protocol can be made available to our partners. The Windows button
launches the [Media Center] UI."
Another related
announcement concerned Microsoft's support of Bluetooth, a wireless technology.
Woodman told me that Microsoft would ship Bluetooth-enabled mice and keyboards
later this year, which could potentially be used with Freestyle PCs.
Conclusions
Windows XP Media Center
Edition was released to
manufacturing on September 3, 2002, and Hewlett Packard PCs based on this design
will ship in mid-October. It's clear from my hands-on time with
prototype Media Center PCs that this technology will usher in a new era of PC computing, and it's
exciting to see the market changing into something that will benefit a far
bigger audience. I'll have a full XP Media Center Edition review,
based on my experience with the Freestyle beta and the final version of the HP
Media Center PC, available by mid-October.
--Paul Thurrott
May 1, 2002
Originally posted January
14, 2002
Updated March 4, 2002, March 14, 2002, March 18, 2002, July 16, 2002, September
3, 2002
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New Screenshots
Old Screenshots

The Freestyle Start screen.

Freestyle's TV Guide lets you
set DVR recording times (the red dot) and look at the schedule.

You can also access your home
video collection--and view DVD movies--with Freestyle.

Here, some of the user's
photos are displayed...

...and here is a music view.
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