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Windows Media Player
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==Features== ===Core playback and library functions=== Windows Media Player supports playback of audio, video and pictures, along with fast forward, reverse, file markers (if present) and variable playback speed (seek & time compression/dilation introduced in WMP 9 Series). It supports local playback, streaming playback with multicast streams and progressive downloads. Items in a playlist can be skipped over temporarily at playback time without removing them from the playlist. Full keyboard-based operation is possible in the player. Windows Media Player supports full media management, via the integrated media library introduced first in version 7, which offers cataloguing and searching of media and viewing media metadata. Media can be arranged according to album, artist, genre, date ''et al.'' Windows Media Player 9 Series introduced Quick Access Panel to browse and navigate the entire library through a menu. The Quick Access Panel was also added to the mini-mode in version 10 but was entirely removed in version 11. WMP 9 Series also introduced ratings and Auto Ratings. Windows Media Player 10 introduced support for aggregating pictures, Recorded TV shows, and other media into the library. A fully featured tag editor was featured in versions 9-11 of WMP, called the Advanced Tag Editor. However, the feature was removed in Windows Media Player 12. Since WMP 9 Series, the player features dynamically updated ''Auto Playlists'' based on criteria. Auto Playlists are updated every time users open them. WMP 9 Series and later also supports ''Auto Ratings'' which automatically assigns ratings based on the number of times a song is played. Pre-populated auto playlists are included in Windows Media Player 9 Series. Custom Auto Playlists can be created only on [[Windows XP]] and later. In Windows Media Player 11, the ''Quick Access Panel'' was removed and replaced with an Explorer-style navigation pane on the left which can be customized for each library to show the user selected media or metadata categories, with contents appearing on the right, in a graphical manner with thumbnails featuring album art or other art depicting the item. Missing album art can be added directly to the placeholders in the Library itself (though the program re-renders all album art imported this way into 1x1 pixel ratio, 200x200 resolution [[JPEG]]s). There are separate ''Tiles'', ''Icons'', ''Details'' or ''Extended Tiles'' views for ''Music'', ''Pictures'', ''Video'' and ''Recorded TV'' which can be set individually from the navigation bar. Entries for ''Pictures'' and ''Video'' show their thumbnails. Version 11 also introduced the ability to search and display results on-the-fly as characters are being entered, without waiting for ''Enter'' key to be hit. [[Incremental search]] results are refined based on further characters that are typed. ''Stacking'' allows graphical representations of how many albums there are in a specific category or folder. The pile appears larger as the category contains more albums. The List pane includes an option to prompt the user to remove items skipped in a playlist upon save or skip them only during playback. ===Visualizations=== [[File:Windows Media Player 11 Mini-player - Visualization.png|thumb|right|Windows Media Player 11 running in mini-mode (in Windows XP MCE) showing the "Bars and Waves" visualization]] While playing music, Windows Media Player can show [[music visualization|visualizations]]. The current three visualizations are '''Alchemy''', which was first introduced in version 9, '''Bars and Waves''', which has been used since version 7, and '''Battery''', introduced version 8. Versions 7 and 8 included with [[Windows Me|Me]] and [[Windows XP|XP]] respectively includes an additional visualization called "Musical Colors", which is not present in out-of-band releases of version 7 as well as version 9 onwards, but is retained if Windows Media Player was upgraded from version 7 or 8. Version 11 and above refrains from having the former "Ambience," "Particle," "Plenoptic," and "Spikes" visualizations from versions 7 to 10. The reason for their removal was that the visualizations do not support full screen controls (either the visualization gets shifted to the left while there is a thick black bar to the right side of the screen, or that there are no full screen controls). More visualizations such as "BlazingColors," "ColorCubes," "PulsingColors," "Softie the Snowman," and "Yule Log" were originally offered as optional extras in version 7 and were later made downloadable from Microsoft's official website, however the downloads have since been taken down. As of today, they can still be found on some websites such as the WMP Goodies site. ===Format support=== The player includes intrinsic support for [[Windows Media]] codecs and also WAV and MP3 media formats. On [[Windows XP]] and above with WMP 9 Series and later, the [[WMA Pro|Windows Media Audio Professional]] codec is included which supports multichannel audio at up to 24-bit 192 kHz resolution. Windows Media Player 11 includes the Windows Media Format 11 runtime which adds low bitrate support (below 128 kbit/s for [[WMA Pro]]), support for ripping music to ''WMA Pro 10'' and updates the original WMA to version 9.2.{{citation needed|date=October 2021}} Support for any media codec and container format can be added using specific [[DirectShow]] filters or [[Media Foundation]] codecs (Media Foundation codecs only in Windows Vista and later). The player will not play MP3 files that contain compressed [[ID3]] headers ("tags"); trying to do so results in a "The input media file is invalid" error message. MP3 playback support was built-in beginning with version 6.1 and audio CD playback was natively supported with version 7.{{citation needed|date=October 2021}} DVD playback features minus the necessary decoders were integrated into Windows Media Player 8 for [[Windows XP]]. The player activates DVD and Blu-ray playback functionality with support for menus, titles and chapters, parental controls and audio track language selection if compatible decoders are installed. MPEG-2 and Dolby Digital (AC-3) decoders were included beginning with Windows Media Player 11 on Windows Vista (Home Premium and Ultimate editions only) and Windows 7 (Home Premium, Ultimate, or Enterprise editions) to allow DVD playback without additional software. However, the decoders were subsequently removed in Windows 8 and Windows 10 due to licensing costs.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/dvd-playback-options-for-windows-927ebe85-7837-4149-4323-f55a9e3c4e36|title=DVD playback options for Windows|website=Microsoft|access-date=March 27, 2025|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201021193849/https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/dvd-playback-options-for-windows-927ebe85-7837-4149-4323-f55a9e3c4e36|archive-date=October 21, 2020|url-status=deviated}}</ref> Windows Media Player 12 adds native support for [[H.264]] and [[MPEG-4 Part 2]] video formats, [[Apple Lossless Audio Codec|ALAC]], [[Advanced Audio Coding|AAC]] audio<ref name="ArsWMP12">{{cite web |url=https://arstechnica.com/microsoft/news/2008/10/hands-on-windows-media-player-12s-surprising-new-features.ars |title=Hands on: Windows Media Player 12's surprising new features |access-date=March 25, 2009 |author=Peter Bright |work=ArsTechnica |publisher=CondΓ© Nast Digital |date=October 30, 2008 |archive-date=March 27, 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090327041159/http://arstechnica.com/microsoft/news/2008/10/hands-on-windows-media-player-12s-surprising-new-features.ars |url-status=live }}</ref> and [[3GP]]{{clarify |post-text=got no codec available for 3GP|date=November 2015}}, [[MP4]] and [[QuickTime File Format|MOV]] container formats.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.neowin.net/news/main/09/02/26/windows-7-rc-to-natively-support-to-mov-files |title=Windows 7 RC to natively support .mov files |access-date=March 25, 2009 |work=Chakkaradeep Chandran |publisher=Neowin.net |date=February 26, 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://archive.today/20120703025255/http://www.neowin.net/news/main/09/02/26/windows-7-rc-to-natively-support-to-mov-files |archive-date=July 3, 2012 }}</ref> Windows Media Player 12 is also able to play [[AVCHD]] formats (''.[[M2TS]]'' and ''[[.mts]]'').<ref name="Win7CameraSupport">{{cite web|url=http://download.microsoft.com/download/5/E/6/5E66B27B-988B-4F50-AF3A-C2FF1E62180F/GRA-T538_WH08.pptx|title=Windows 7 next generation camera support|format=PPTX|work=Download Center|publisher=[[Microsoft]]|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081227083315/http://download.microsoft.com/download/5/E/6/5E66B27B-988B-4F50-AF3A-C2FF1E62180F/GRA-T538_WH08.pptx|archive-date=December 27, 2008}}</ref> As of [[Windows 10]], Windows Media Player 12 can play [[FLAC]], [[HEVC]], and [[SubRip]] subtitle, and [[Matroska]] container formats.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.lifehacker.com.au/2014/11/native-mkv-flac-and-hevc-support-in-windows-10/|title=Native MKV, FLAC And HEVC Support In Windows 10|website=Lifehacker Australia|date=29 November 2014 }}</ref> Although the [[WebM]] file type is not officially associated with Windows Media Player 12 (the default player is [[Microsoft Movies & TV]]), playback of [[VP9]] video in [[WebM]] container is possible on Windows 10 version 1809 and later.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.vacuumbreather.com/index.php/blog/item/81-windows-10-1809-built-in-apps-what-to-keep|title=Windows 10 1809 Built-In Apps: What to Keep|website=Vacuum Breather|access-date=2022-06-09|archive-date=2023-04-10|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230410115828/https://www.vacuumbreather.com/index.php/blog/item/81-windows-10-1809-built-in-apps-what-to-keep|url-status=dead}}</ref> ====Windows Media Player Mobile==== Windows Media Player Mobile 10 on [[Windows Mobile]] 6.5 supports [[MP3]], [[Advanced Systems Format|ASF]], [[Windows Media Audio|WMA]], and [[Windows Media Video|WMV]] using WMV or [[MPEG-4]] codecs.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc907938.aspx |title=Formats supported by Windows Media Player Mobile |work=[[MSDN]] |publisher=[[Microsoft]] |date=April 8, 2010 |access-date=November 7, 2012 |archive-date=November 18, 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121118154735/http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc907938.aspx |url-status=live }}</ref> ===Disc burning, ripping, and playback=== Windows Media Player features integrated [[Audio CD]]-burning support since version 7 as well as data CD burning support since Windows Media Player 9 Series on [[Windows XP]] and later. Data CDs can have any of the media formats supported by the player. While burning Data CDs, the media can, optionally, be transcoded into WMA format and playlists can be added to the CD as well. Starting with WMP 9 Series, audio CDs can be burnt with volume leveling. Audio CDs can be ripped as WMA or WMA 10 Pro (WMA 10 Pro in WMP 11 and later) at 48, 64, 96, 128, 160, and 192 [[Kilobit per second|kbit/s]], [[Windows Media Audio 9 Lossless|WMA lossless]] (470 to 940 kbit/s) (9 Series on XP and later), WMA [[variable bitrate]] (from 40 to 75 kbit/s up to 240-355 kbit/s), MP3 at 128, 192, 256, and 320 kbit/s, or uncompressed [[WAV]] (WAV ripping in WMP 11 and later). Since WMP 9 Series, 20 bit high-resolution CDs ([[High Definition Compatible Digital|HDCDs]]) are also supported, if capable audio hardware is present. Audio can be ripped using error correction and ripped audio can be protected with [[Windows Media DRM]]. Ripping to MP3 is supported only in Windows Media Player 8 for [[Windows XP]] and later if a compatible MP3 encoder is installed. Windows Media Player 10 included the Fraunhofer MP3 Professional encoder. Information on CDs such as album name, artist and track listings can optionally be automatically downloaded from the online Windows Media database when the CD is inserted. Version 11 added support for ripping audio CDs to [[WAV]] and [[WMA Pro|WMA 10 Pro]] formats. With their 2015 implementation in Windows 10, Version 12 also added lossless [[FLAC]] and [[Apple Lossless Audio Codec|ALAC]] formats for ripping and playback. For burning, version 11 shows a graphical bar indicating how much space will be used on the disc and introduced ''Disc spanning'' which splits a burn list onto multiple discs in case the content does not fit on one disc. ===Portable device sync=== Windows Media Player allows the user to connect, share and sync data with portable handheld devices and [[game console]]s since version 7. Media can be optionally transcoded to a format better suited for the target device, automatically, when synchronizing. When deleting playlists from devices, Windows Media Player can automatically remove their contents. Devices can be formatted using Windows Media Player 9 Series and later. Version 10 and later support the [[Media Transfer Protocol]] and Auto Sync. Auto Sync allows users to specify criteria such as recently added music or highest rated songs, by which media will be automatically synchronized with the portable device and other advanced features like setting the clock on the portable device automatically, communicating with the device to retrieve the user's preferences. Windows Media Player 10 also introduced the [[User-Mode Driver Framework|UMDF]]-based ''Windows Portable Devices'' API. Version 11 has improved synchronization features for loading content onto [[PlaysForSure]]-compatible portable players. WMP 11 supports reverse-synchronization, by which media present on the portable device can be replicated back to the PC. ''Shuffle Sync'' can be used to randomize content synced with the portable device, ''Multi PC Sync'' to synchronize portable device content across multiple PCs and ''Guest Sync'' to synchronize different content from multiple PCs with the portable device. Portable devices appear in the navigation pane of the library where their content can be browsed and searched. Windows Media Player's 'Sync' function has options that allow it to be set to automatically down-convert (transcode) high bit-rate song files to a lower bit-rate. This down-conversion function is switched on by default. This is useful for providing low bit-rate files to those portable devices that need them, and to save space on portable devices with smaller storage capacities. For high bit-rate capable devices with sufficient storage capabilities, the down conversion process can be omitted. In versions 11 (2006) and 12 (2009), the Quality settings that the user has selected in the Windows Media Player settings for Sync, for that specific portable device, are used to control the quality (bit-rate) of files that are copied to the portable device. Leaving the Quality settings to Automatic will often result in 192kbs files being copied to the portable device. Manual settings can also be made. 192kbs is the highest quality down-conversion bit-rate that can be manually selected when the Sync function's down-conversion function is turned on. Lower bit-rates can also be selected. For portable devices that can handle high bit-rate files, the best quality files are obtained by leaving the down-conversion process switched off (unchecked) for that specific device. In Windows Media Player Version 11, switching off the down-conversion function is done in the Quality tab of the Advanced Options of the Sync settings for the device. In Windows Media Player Version 12, switching off the down-conversion function is done in the Quality tab of the Properties for the device in the Select Settings for the device in the Sync Options menu. When set up in such a way, Windows Media Player's 'Sync' function can be used to sync unchanged high bit-rate song files to suitable portable devices (i.e. those capable of using file formats such as WMA Lossless, mp3-360kbs, etc.). For example, some users have created large song libraries on their PCs containing .wma formatted song files using the high bit-rate WMA Lossless (WMA-LL) protocol, or using other high bit-rate song file formats. The WMA-LL protocol is selectable in Windows Media Player as an option when ripping songs from CDs. The resulting bit-rates seen on ripped WMA-LL files are often 3 to 6 times higher than 192kbs, and can typically fall anywhere in the range of 600kbs to 1200kbs, depending on the quality of the source file that was present on the CD in the first place. The sound quality is much improved over the default rate, although the file size is larger. At the time that Versions 11 and 12 were released, the capabilities and capacities of portable devices typically required down-conversion of the bit-rates of the files placed on the portable devices. Thus, Sync down-conversion was turned on by default. This was to ensure playability of the files and to ensure that the file sizes were small enough to efficiently fit a reasonably large selection of songs on the portable device. In recent years (circa 2012), portable devices became available that could natively play these Windows Media Player produced high bit-rate WMA-LL files (and others), and that have storage capacities suitable for large collections of high bit-rate song files. This made it much more practicable and desirable to use software programs such as Windows Media Player to synchronize previously PC-bound libraries of high bit-rate songs to these new portable devices. ===Enhanced playback features=== Windows Media Player features universal brightness, contrast, saturation and hue adjustments and [[pixel aspect ratio]] for supported video formats. It also includes a 10-band graphic equalizer with presets and [[SRS Labs|SRS WOW]] audio post-processing system. Windows Media Player can also have attached audio and video [[digital signal processing|DSP]] plug-ins which process the output audio or video data. ''Video Smoothing'' was introduced in WMP 9 Series ([[Windows XP|Windows XP]] and later only) which upscales frame-rate by interpolating added frames, in effect giving a smoother playback on low-framerate videos. The player supports subtitles and closed-captioning for local media, video on demand streaming or live streaming scenarios. Typically Windows Media captions support the [[SAMI]] file format but can also carry embedded closed caption data. The player can use video [[hardware overlay|overlays]] or [[DirectShow filter|VMR]] (Video Mixing Renderer) surfaces, if the video card supports them. In [[Windows XP]], it uses VMR7 by default, but can also be made to use the more advanced [[Y'UV|YUV]] mixing mode by enabling the "Use high quality mode" option in Advanced Performance settings. This turns on deinterlacing, scaling and improved color accuracy.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://download.microsoft.com/download/0/b/8/0b89049d-dc57-4571-aa69-cf592743a241/WMPlayer.doc |title=Windows Media Player manual |work=Download Center |publisher=[[Microsoft]] |format=DOC |date=September 1, 2004 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050607011331/http://download.microsoft.com/download/0/b/8/0b89049d-dc57-4571-aa69-cf592743a241/WMPlayer.doc |archive-date=June 7, 2005}}</ref> WMP 9 Series introduced native playback for deinterlacing for TV output. Version 9 introduced DXVA accelerated playback. Version 11 introduced improved support for DirectX accelerated decoding of WMV video ([[DirectX Video Acceleration|DXVA]] decoding). Up to version 11, it supported static lyrics and "Synchronized Lyrics", by which different lines of lyrics can be time-stamped, so that they display only at those times. Synchronized Lyrics also were accessible through the Advanced Tag Editor which was removed in version 12. Since Windows Media Player 9 Series, the player supports crossfading, audio dynamic range (Quiet Mode) for WMA Pro and WMA Lossless, and auto volume leveling for certain media which includes volume level/gain information such as MP3 or Windows Media. The player also supports extensive configurable privacy and security settings. ===Shell integration=== The player has [[Windows Explorer]] shell integration to add files and playlist to the ''Now Playing'' pane and other playlists can be controlled from the Windows Explorer shell itself, via right-click menu. The My Music folder also includes a separate ''My Playlists'' folder where playlists are maintained. When the player is closed and reopened, simply clicking the play button restores the last playlist even if it was not saved. Starting with Windows Media Player 10, the playlist pane is also visible from the Library view. [[AutoPlay]] handlers in Windows expose various Windows Media Player tasks. [[File:Windows Media Player 11 in MiniMode - XP, Vista.png|thumb|left|Windows Media Player 11 running in mini-mode in Windows Vista and Windows XP respectively (notice the difference in the logo)]] Up to version 11, it featured a taskbar-mounted ''Mini-mode'' in which the most common media control buttons are presented as a toolbar on the Windows [[taskbar]]. Flyout windows can display media information, the active visualization or the video being played back. Mini-mode was introduced as a shell player powertoy for Windows Media Player 8 in [[Windows XP]] and integrated later into WMP 9 Series. Mini-mode has been removed in Windows Media Player 12 in favor of controls in the taskbar's interactive thumbnail preview which lacks volume control, a progress bar and information displayed whenever a new song is played. Despite this, however, Mini-mode can be restored in Windows Media Player 12 by registering the wmpband.dll file from Windows Media Player 11.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.askvg.com/how-to-get-windows-media-player-wmp-taskbar-toolbar-back-in-windows-7/ |title=How to Get Windows Media Player (WMP) 12 Taskbar Toolbar (Taskband) Back in Windows 7 and Later? β AskVG |work=AskVG |first=Vishal |last=Gupta |date=January 2010 |access-date=2023-04-12 }}</ref> The user interface has been redesigned in Windows Media Player 12 such that the ''Now Playing'' view plays media in a separate minimalist window with floating playback controls, and also gives access to the current playlist, visualizations, and enhancements.<ref name="ArsWMP12"/> Enhancements are housed in individual undocked windows. The library view includes the rest of the media management functions. It also can preview songs from the library when users hover over the media file and click the Preview button.<ref name="ArsWMP12"/> Windows Media Player 12 can play unprotected songs from the [[iTunes]] library. As previously mentioned, taskbar-integrated mini-mode has been replaced with controls in the taskbar's interactive thumbnail preview (called the ''Thumbnail Toolbar''),<ref>{{cite web |url=https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/magazine/dd942846.aspx#id0420081 |title=Introducing The Taskbar APIs |work=[[MSDN Magazine]] |publisher=[[Microsoft]] |first1=Yochay |last1=Kiriaty |first2=Sasha |last2=Goldshtein |date=July 2009 |at=Thumbnail Toolbars |access-date=2015-04-23 |archive-date=2015-03-25 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150325042123/https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/magazine/dd942846.aspx#id0420081 |url-status=live }}</ref> albeit minus the volume control function, track and album information shown whenever a new song is played and the progress bar. The taskbar icon also supports jump lists introduced in [[Windows 7]]. [[File:Windows Media Player 12 live preview.png|thumb|The thumbnail viewer of Windows Media Player 12 in [[Windows 7]]]] ===Extensibility=== The player has had [[Skin (computing)|skinning]] support since Windows Media Player (WMP) 7 and includes a color chooser since the WMP 9 Series. Not all functions are usually exposed in skin mode. Windows Media Player 10 allows setting the video border color. Color chooser has been removed in WMP 12. It supports visualizations and ''Info Center View'' (Info Center View in WMP 9 Series and later) which displays media metadata fetched from the internet. Full screen visualizations are supported in WMP 9 Series and later. It supports Background plug-ins, window plug-ins and ''Now Playing'' plug-ins to control media playback besides DSP and renderer plug-ins. Plug-in support was introduced in WMP 9 Series. ===Online features=== The player integrates web-browsing support to browse digital music stores, shop for music and tune to internet radio stations since version 7. It provides an embeddable [[ActiveX control]] for [[Internet Explorer]] so that developers can play [[Windows Media]] on web pages. Windows Media Player 10 and later feature integration with a large number of digital music stores and selecting a music store switches the Info Center view, radio and other online features to use services from that store. Purchased music from a particular store appears in a separate library node under the respective category. ===Media streaming=== Previously, Microsoft had released [[Windows Media Connect]] for [[Windows XP]] to stream media content with its built-in UPnP media server. With version 11 of Windows Media Player, [[WMPNSS|Media Sharing]] was integrated and allows content (Music, Pictures, Video) to be streamed to and from [[Universal Plug and Play|Universal Plug and Play (UPnP) AV]] enabled devices such as the [[PS3]], [[Xbox 360]], and Roku [[SoundBridge]]. This includes DRM protected [[PlaysForSure]] content. WMP 11 on Windows Vista can also act as a client to connect to remote media libraries using this feature; this is not available on the [[Windows XP]] version. With version 12, media streaming was further improved. While previous versions streamed media to [[UPnP]] compliant devices (Digital Media Server role) and could play media by fetching it from a network share (Digital Media Player role),<ref name="WMP12Streaming">{{cite web |url=http://blogs.msdn.com/b/e7/archive/2009/05/12/media-streaming-with-windows-7.aspx |title=Media Streaming with Windows 7 |publisher=[[Microsoft]] |work=Engineering Windows 7 |first=Steven |last=Sinofsky |date=May 12, 2009 |access-date=April 23, 2015 |archive-date=July 12, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110712162812/http://blogs.msdn.com/b/e7/archive/2009/05/12/media-streaming-with-windows-7.aspx |url-status=live }}</ref> Windows Media Player 12 can access media from the shared media libraries on the network or HomeGroup, stream media to [[DLNA]] 1.5 compliant devices and allows itself (once the remote control option is turned on) to be remotely controlled by Digital Media Controller devices which stream media (Digital Media Renderer role).<ref name="WMP12Streaming"/> Similarly, the ''Play To'' feature once enabled for remote PCs, by turning on remote control of the player, allows compliant devices and computers to be discovered and controlled remotely from a computer running Windows Media Player 12 (Digital Media Controller role).<ref name="WMP12Streaming"/> If the devices do not support the streamed format, Windows Media Player 12 transcodes the format on-the-fly. Media from a home network can also be streamed over the internet using an ''Online ID Provider'' service, which handles discovery of the computer's IP address, authorization, security, connectivity and Quality of Service issues.<ref name="WMP12Streaming"/> ===Skin Mode=== Windows Media Player also features skins. Currently, Windows Media Player has two default skins: "Corporate", which was first introduced in version 8, and "Revert", which first shipped with version 9. In previous versions of Windows Media Player starting with version 7, there were many usual skins offered, some of which were included in various versions of Windows. A non-exhaustive list of skins included with Windows Media Player from versions 7β10 are "9SeriesDefault", "Atomic", "Bluesky", "Canvas", "Classic", "Compact", "goo", "Headspace", "heart", "iconic", "Miniplayer", "Optic", "Pyrite", "QuickSilver", "Radio", "Roundlet", "Rusty", "splat", "Toothy", "Windows Classic", and "Windows XP". All of these skins were removed starting with version 11, but are retained if the player is upgraded. Some skins such as the ones included in previous versions can be downloaded from the Microsoft website, however they have since been removed. It has been archived since 2016 and is currently available.<ref>{{cite web|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160609092016/http://windows.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/windows-media-player-skins#t1=all|title=Skins for Windows Media Player|publisher=[[Microsoft]]|work=Windows|archive-date=June 9, 2016|url=http://windows.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/windows-media-player-skins#t1=all|url-status=dead}}</ref> The Corporate skin is not deletable.
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