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Technical Excellence — Real Networks was the original innovator in this category and thus had a natural early lead. But thanks to the development and adoption of the next-generation, emerging, high-quality MPEG-4 standard, Microsoft's technology has caught up and the Version 6.4 Windows Media Player can decode and play MPEG-4 video. In our testing, when carefully tuned, no other media encoding technology outperformed this system. We have hand-tuned our encoding to generate less than two megabytes per minute of video, while producing absolutely acceptable image size and quality. (By employing some "bitrate averaging" tricks.)
Free and Built into Windows — Most people will already have a media player that's capable of playing these videos. Those who don't may freely download a compatible player from Microsoft's web site. Any Media Player — from version 6.4 on — will be able to play these videos. We like version 6.4 because it has much less "fluff" than version 7. Version 7 has been widely — and deservedly — criticized for its amazing amount of typical "Microsoft bloat".
Non-Streaming File Downloads — We are not fans of streaming for video archives. It seems to us that with today's huge hard drives, there is no reason not to download a video locally once — no matter how long it may take over your connection — then play it, with reasonable quality, as many times as you wish. This approach is much more modem-friendly. Also, the best overall video quality is obtained by employing variable bitrate encoding which allows high-motion scenes to use more bits than low-motion scenes. This is not something that can be done with fixed-rate streaming video. As a result, streaming makes sense for live content like news, weather, and sports, but not for video archives like this one.
Unfortunately, Real Networks is Evil — We inherently identify with, and root for, the little guy, therefore Real Networks was once our favored choice. So it's sad and unfortunate that time and time again Real Networks demonstrates active contempt for the privacy rights of their products' users. They spy every way they can on their users' activities. There is NO WAY we would ever have any of their junk on our systems and we would never recommend their use to anyone.
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Check Your Media Player
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Since we encoded these audio/video clips with Microsoft's version 7 compression technology, your system will need to have a version 7 decompressor installed in order to view them. If it doesn't already have one, it is easily added.
To determine if any updates are needed:
Download the test video — We created a short test video to verify your system's ability to play the full-size videos:
"Right click" on the image below and . . .
With Internet Explorer choose "Save Target As..." to download and save the file into your computer.
With Netscape Navigator choose "Save Link As..." to download and save the file into your computer.
Be sure to make note of where the file is saved within your computer so you can locate and run it after it's downloaded. Placing it on your system desktop is often convenient.![[image]](http://mowser.com/img?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.grc.com%2Fimage%2Ftitlepage.gif)
Run the test video — Double-click on the WMV video file to attempt to run it with your system's media player. One of the following things will happen:
The test video plays without trouble — Great!! Your system is ready to play any of the videos on this page. You may scroll down to browse through our audio and video clip archive . . .
Media player needs updating — Your media player may say that it needs to download some updated files from Microsoft in order to play this video. Depending upon your preferences and your local security and personal firewall settings, you may choose to do this. If so, proceed to give Media Player permission to update itself, then re-run the test video.
Your system doesn't recognize the WMV file — If your system doesn't know what to do with the WMV file type, please see the next item (3) for help installing a compatible Windows media player.
Install Windows Media Player — If your system does not recognize the WMV (Windows Media Video) file type, you may need to install or update your Windows Media Player. The Windows Media "Download Center" page on Microsoft's site contains a collection of download links. We recommend that you install version 6.4 unless you're a person who likes lots of non-functional and superfluous bells and whistles, in which case version 7 is definitely for you!:If you are a Netscape user who dislikes Internet Explorer, you may need to use a non-IE version of Media Player (don't ask us why Media Player cares about your web browser . . . but it does.) You can find all available versions of Media Player on the following page:
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Remember to first download the file from our site rather than "running it" directly from your browser. (Probably by right-clicking your mouse on any of the images or highlighted links below.)
You WILL experience a 20-second buffering delay when you play any of these videos. We employed some tricky video encoding to yield the highest quality in the smallest file size. A side effect of our use of an overly large "bit rate averaging window" is a delay in playback startup . . . but the improved quality justifies the delay.
We also provide the much smaller audio tracks for each video, in MPEG-1 LAYER-3 (MP3) format, if that's all you want.
Also note that these are organized in chronological order, oldest first, newest last. So if you are looking for the latest stuff please scroll to the bottom.
June 17, 1998Playing Time: 12:56
November 06, 1998Playing Time: 09:13
November 20, 1999Playing Time: 04:22
December 09, 1999Playing Time: 04:39
March 02, 2000Playing Time: 09:21
April 09, 2001Playing Time: 05:32
April 10, 2001Playing Time: 05:23
May 09, 2001Playing Time: 05:15
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