Problem:
Media Center Extender video playback is limited by hardware to MPEG2 and WMV basic formats.
Solution:
Transcode files into a format that is useful for Media Center Extender. Windows Media Player 10 has a new synchronization engine for portable devices that already does this, the basic operation goes like this:
- Device publishes its capabilities (screen size, playback formats, etc)
- WMP10 determines what files should be copied over on next syc
- Files that are not already in a compatible format are transcoded to a compatible format, and are placed in a cache
- Upon sync, it copies over the transcoded files and not the original files
Specifically with MCE and MCX, here is how it might work:
- MCX publishes its capabilities to the MCE machine
- MCE determines files that do not match those capabilities and places them into a transcode queue
- MCE transcodes these files into WMV9 format with a max bitrate of 4 MB/s (per the MCX's capabilities)
- When MCX attempts to access a file, it is redirected to the transcoded version
- If the file is not yet available in a compatible format, it is added to the transcode queue and the user is notified
- Windows Media Connect devices
- Media Center Extender devices
- Other PCs on the LAN (maybe without MPEG-2 decoders)
By applying existing technology, it suddenly becomes possible to access my ripped DVD collection, my home videos taken from the Sony Digital8 camera, music stored in Ogg format, etc.
LINK !


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