Analysis of my blogging

Some people nkow my blog better than I do. Check out Mike A’s analysis of my blogging habits over the past six months. Wow!

The other side of the story is that shortly after Christmas I moved off of working on Windows Vista fulltime and started working on a different project and so your speculation is just a little bit off :).

Paul Thurott on interm build

Paul Thurott has been pretty honest with his feelings about Media Center’s performance in the past so it is great to see him write some postive things about interm build 5536:

Windows Media Center shows, perhaps, the biggest performance improvement of any Vista component. The application almost pops to life and, using the “Express” setup option, can be in use almost immediately. I won’t be trying to put Media Center on my family’s Media Center PC again until RC1 hits, but it’s clear that something wonderful has happened here.

Media Center and HD DVD and other next gen formats

There have been a few comments asking about what’s going on with HD DVD and Media Center.

First, to clear up the confusion about 32 bit vs 64 bit playback I point you to The Windows Vista Team Blog, Clarifying Windows Vista Support of Protected HD Content in 32-bit Systems:

The real deal is that no version of Windows Vista will make a determination as to whether any given piece of content should play back or not. The individual ISV providing the playback solutions will choose whether the playback environment, including environments that use 32-bit processors, meet the performance requirements for playback of protected High Definition content.

Secondly, what’s going on with HD DVD and Media Center? I was going to be working on that but was pulled off to work on something else. In my place Peter was the program manager and has this post about our support for next gen DVD formats, HD DVD and Blu-ray application extensibility in Windows Media Center. In short, we provide the extensibility mechanisms necessary for you to drop in your own playback application and have it called from Media Center.

Thirdly, our press release from WinHEC has some info, Hardware and Software Vendors Rally Behind HD DVD at WinHEC 2006

At the conference, Microsoft reiterated that Windows Vista will be shipped with the drivers, file system and other components necessary to support HD DVD playback.

So no, I’m not quiting because HD DVDs won’t play on 32 bit systems :).