![]() ![]() ![]() Windows Media Player is safe and will not be intentionally removed at this time, so you can probably disregard all this bellyaching about it. UPDATE: This is all because of a bug in the Windows Insider build of the update. Windows Media Player is the 20-year old butt groove for my music. Windows Media Player is the battered La-Z-Boy chair you refuse to get rid of because of the 20-year butt groove. The playlists are obnoxiously organized and it knows to ignore the terrible music I've downloaded and kept for some reason. The shuffle knows what I want to hear based on my mood. I have been using Windows Media Player since its inception. To me, Windows Media Player is much more than just something to handle my library of Mp3 and FLAC (and a few actual WMV files) but something that is the doorway to my universe of music. Maybe this is just another situation where I'm the most defiantly belligerent technologist ever, refusing to give up my classic software in lieu of the latest and greatest music service. Eventually, I expect Microsoft to formally remove Windows Media Player from the OS in favor of the streaming services alliance. From there you can select add a feature and scroll down to install Windows Media Player. Open Settings, go to Apps then Apps and Features, and click on manage optional features. You can install it through the 'Add a Feature' setting. Plus, Microsoft hasn't cut off every road to getting Windows Media Player back. Probably nothing but Michael Bolton's greatest hits and a few random Billy Joel tracks.Įven though the update is mandatory, if you have upgraded to Build 16299.15, it appears Windows Media Player will still run on 32-bit systems, but an error is received on 64-bit systems (though I'm also being told it works fine on 64-bit systems, so your guess is as good as mine). For the dozen users of this streaming service, Microsoft is partnering with Spotify so users can import their playlists. So it makes sense that Microsoft is killing its Groove Music Pass, which is a thing I just heard of. It is the Zune of media streaming services. Whatever it was trying to compete with, it failed miserably. First off, it has trouble reading half my library for some reason. It seems that this might be part of a larger initiative by Microsoft to salvage its Groove music service, which was pretty lame from the start. Also without the constant need to touch everything and with less unquenchable thirst. Put on a Spock's Beard or Phish album and you are having an acid trip without the acid. Let us also not forget the mesmerizing visualizations that can be found in the trippy display of Windows Media Player. You try organizing a 400GB music library in VLC. The gist of it is, there is no way in hell I'm using a Microsoft operating system without my Windows Media Player. ![]() The update might not remove it from all machines, but it already seems to be having an effect. It was only included in clean installs of Windows 10, so some machines have been missing it for a while. Microsoft hasn't explicitly said it is killing Media Player, which I suppose gives us some hope that it will continue to live on, but this isn't the first time that I've had to reinstall the program. ![]()
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