DVD Player (Windows)

DVD Player is an app developed by Microsoft that plays DVD-Video on Microsoft Windows. DVD Player was introduced in Windows 98, and was included in Windows ME and Windows 2000 before removal from Windows XP and beyond.[1] After Windows XP, DVD playback was built into other apps such as Windows Media Player and Windows Media Center instead. Following the discontinuation of Media Center in Windows 10 and the removal of DVD codecs from Windows 8, DVD Player was reintroduced to Windows 10 as an app available from Microsoft Store.

DVD Player
Developer(s)Microsoft
Stable release6.0 (September 24, 2018 (2018-09-24)) [±]
Operating systemMicrosoft Windows
Predecessor

Windows 98, 2000, and ME versions

DVD Player in Windows ME

When the DVD Player is launched, it searches all local drives in alphabetical order from C:, looking for a Video_TS folder. When this folder is located, the data file within it is loaded, and video streaming begins. If this folder exists on a drive that comes before the DVD drive, the player will try to play the data in the first folder it finds.

In Windows 98 and Windows 2000, DVD Player only plays DVDs if a hardware-based MPEG decoder is present. In Windows ME, DVD Player supports software-based MPEG decoders.[2][3]

DVD Player was dropped in Windows XP in favor of the DVD functionality introduced into Windows Media Player. While the DVDPlay executable still resides in %Windir%\system32, it simply executes Windows Media Player. On Windows 8, Windows Media Center and DVD playback support were relegated to a premium add-on for Windows 8 Pro, citing the costs of licensing the decoders and the market moving away from DVD-Video.[4]

Windows 10 version

Windows DVD Player was made available for Windows 10 on desktop computers to provide DVD playback functionality.[5] When launched, it searches for movie files in the disc drive. It can also be picked as an option in the AutoPlay dialog when a disc is inserted. However, if the disc is switched, the app needs to restart.[5] It is available as a paid app through Microsoft Store, although it is distributed at no charge to those who had upgraded from an installation of Windows 7 or Windows 8 that included Windows Media Center.[6][5][7]

gollark: It isn't that high. You're a relatively young person presumably, and you aren't certain to get COVID-19 anyway.
gollark: Well, it does use similar technology to the AstraZeneca one, which apparently has similar problems.
gollark: They apparently have mandatory vaccination for basically everything else, but the COVID-19 ones are only approved under emergency use authorizations right now.
gollark: Apparently the UK has 47.6% first-dose-or-more vaccine coverage, which is surprisingly competent of the government.
gollark: Not exactly, since nonvaccination affects other people a lot too and antivaxxerness isn't a genetic thing.

References

  1. "Chapter 12 - Multimedia". TechNet. Microsoft. Retrieved 30 July 2015.
  2. "Ask the Windows 2000 Dev Team". TechNet. Microsoft. 5 January 2000.
  3. "Description of DVD Player in Windows Millennium Edition". Support (2.0 ed.). Microsoft. June 19, 2014. Archived from the original on July 10, 2015.
  4. Albanesius, Chloe (May 4, 2012). "Microsoft Dropping DVD Playback Support in Windows 8". PC Magazine. Ziff Davis. Retrieved May 20, 2012.
  5. Paul, Ian (29 July 2015). "How to play DVDs in Windows 10 for free". PCWorld. IDG.
  6. Weir, Andy (29 July 2015). "Microsoft rolls out Windows DVD Player for Windows 10 users who used to have Media Center". Neowin. Neowin LLC.
  7. "Buy Windows DVD Player". Microsoft Store. Microsoft Corporation. 20 July 2015.


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