January 10, 2006 (IDG News Service) --
Windows XP Media Center Edition may not yet be the standard home entertainment hub that Microsoft Corp. hopes it will be, but analysts said that could all change once the company releases the next consumer client version of the Windows operating system later this year. Though Microsoft has not gone public about whether there will be a separate Media Center release for Windows Vista, it's very likely Microsoft will eschew a separate edition in favor of building Media Center features directly into the edition of Vista that goes out on most consumer machines, said Matt Rosoff, analyst with Directions on Microsoft Inc. "I'm very confident the standard consumer [version] of Vista will have Media Center built into it," he said. "It's just going to be a part of the OS." Rosoff is echoing what has been published in various reports, though a representative from Microsoft's public relations firm Waggener Edstrom Inc. said Monday the company is not confirming how Media Center will be built into Vista, or if there will be a separate Media Center edition for Vista. Michael Gartenberg, an analyst at JupiterResearch and a Computerworld columnist, acknowledged that Microsoft itself may not be sure how it's going to package Windows Media Center for Vista, which is expected to be available before the end of the year. Still, he expects the core features of Media Center, such as providing users access to television programming and digital media on the PC, to be included in the Vista release. "Look for Media Center to be very much a part of the consumer Windows experience," he said. Windows XP Media Center Edition allows users to play digital music, cable television programming and movies on PCs while using a remote control and a user interface that is more like a consumer electronics device than a normal PC operating system. Last week at the International Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas Microsoft touted Media Center PCs as beginning to catch on as a digital home entertainment hub. During his keynote speech, Microsoft Chairman and Chief Software Architect Bill Gates quoted numbers from Current Analysis Inc. that 47.1% of the PCs sold at retail in the U.S. in December were running Windows XP Media Center Edition. He also demonstrated new multimedia capabilities of Vista that are similar to features in the current Media Center Edition, and launched new deals with Starz Entertainment Group LLC and The Directv Group Inc. to provide more cable programming and digital video content to Media Center users both on PCs and on handheld devices.
Even if the Current Analysis numbers on Media Center PC sales are accurate, Rosoff said that
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