﻿<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<content xmlns="http://www.microsoft.com/MSCOM/MNP2/Schemas" type="MNP2.GenericArticle">
  <head>
    <meta name="pageTitle" content="Viewing Recorded TV on a Windows Mobile-based Portable Media Center" />
    <meta name="KEYWORDS" content="Microsoft Windows XP Professional, Home Edition, Whistler, Service Pack 2, SP2, Windows Firewall, Security Center, pop-up blocker, viewing recorded TV" />
    <meta name="DESCRIPTION" content="Discusses the new Windows Mobile-based Portable Media Center device features for synchronizing and viewing recorded TV and video." />
    <meta name="publishedDate" content="2004-04-12" />
  </head>
  <body>

    <authors>
      <author>
        <name>Barb Bowman, Windows XP Expert Zone Community Columnist</name>
      </author>
    </authors>
    
    
    <relatedLinks>
      <link xlinkHref="/windowsmobile/resources/communities/pocketpc/newsgroups.mspx">Ask questions or discuss Windows Mobile-based Portable Media Centers in the newsgroups.</link>
      <link xlinkHref="/windowsmobile/devices/portablemediacenter/americas.mspx">Where to buy a Windows Mobile-based Portable Media Center device</link>
      <link xlinkHref="/windowsxp/using/mobility/expert/bowman_pmc2.xml">Viewing Recorded TV on a Windows Mobile-based Portable Media Center</link>
      <link xlinkHref="http://www.microsoft.com/windows/windowsmedia/mp10/default.aspx">Windows Media Player 10</link>
	  <link xlinkHref="http://www.creative.com/products/product.asp?prodid=9882">Creative Zen Portable Media Center</link>
	  <link xlinkHref="http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/mediacenter/default.mspx">Windows XP Media Center Edition</link>
	  <link xlinkHref="http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/downloads/updates/moviemaker2.mspx">Windows Movie Maker 2 for Windows XP</link>
	  <link xlinkHref="http://www.microsoft.com/windows/plus/dme/try.asp">Try out Photo Story 2 for Free</link>
	  <link xlinkHref="http://www.shure.com/earphones/index.asp">Shure Isolation Earphones</link>
	  <link xlinkHref="/windowsxp/using/mobility/expert/bridgman_PMCwmp10.mspx">Column: Using Windows Mobile-based Portable Media Centers and Windows Media Player 10</link>
	  <link xlinkHref="/windowsxp/expertzone/columns/bowman/default.asp">Previous columns by Barb Bowman</link>
    </relatedLinks>
<graphic src="/windowsxp/images/expertzone/columns/bowman/hs_bowman_lg.jpg" alt="Barb Bowman" alignment="near" />
    <para>I have a <link xlinkHref="/windowsxp/mediacenter/default.mspx">Windows XP Media Center Edition</link> system and use it to record a lot of TV shows, I’ve been struggling to figure out how I can take these recorded shows with me and watch them at a friend’s house or on vacation.</para>
    <para>I record TV using the <formatting role="bold">Best</formatting> quality setting on the Windows XP Media Center Edition-based computer. This creates the largest files, but anything less just doesn’t look right to me. I can’t copy the TV files to a DVD because they’re too large for standard DVD+RW. I’ve tried software to split movies and save them on two DVD+RWs but I have lost the battle due to lack of time.</para>
<para>I’ve also copied the TV recordings to my laptop and used Windows Media Player when away from home to watch recorded TV, but a few of these files can quickly fill a 40 gigabyte (GB) laptop hard drive. </para>
<section><title>Watching What I Want, When I Want, Where I Want</title>
<para>The Portable Media Center solves the problem. Windows Media Player 10 takes my two-hour recorded TV file, roughly 5.5 gigabytes (GB), and transcodes it to make a 573-megabyte (MB) file that I can watch on the Portable Media Center. It’s a much smaller file, and yet the video quality is remarkable. You could carry 50 to 60 hours worth of recorded TV on the Portable Media Center. This is really going to be a handy feature for parents who take long trips with young children. I know a lot of parents who now carry a laptop or a DVD player and a couple DVDs for the kids to watch while traveling. But with a TV recording setup at home, and the Portable Media Center, they could take a huge selection of favorite TV shows to keep the kids entertained in transit.</para>
<para>The Portable Media Center also offers two ways to watch the shows. I can watch them on the 3.8-inch display with earphones attached, which is great for airports, airplanes, or doctor’s office waiting rooms. I can also watch them with sound coming out of the speaker on the Portable Media Center. </para>
<para>Alternatively, with a special adapter that comes with the Portable Media Center, I can plug it into a TV and watch the video on a full-size screen. The TV must have composite video and left and right stereo connectors. Some older TVs may not have these. The connectors are usually yellow, white, and red. Plug the adapter into the <formatting role="bold">TV Out</formatting> port on the Portable Media Center and into the TV to watch the video on the full-size screen.</para>
<para><formatting role="bold">To adjust the audio and video output:</formatting></para>
<list class="ordered">
<listItem>
<para>Press the <formatting role="bold">Start </formatting>button on the Portable Media Center to display the <formatting role="bold">Start </formatting>menu</para>
</listItem>
<listItem>
<para>Highlight <formatting role="bold">settings </formatting>and press <formatting role="bold">OK</formatting>.</para>
</listItem>
<listItem>
<para>Highlight <formatting role="bold">Display </formatting>and press <formatting role="bold">OK</formatting>.</para>
</listItem>
<listItem>
<para>Select <formatting role="bold">TV out</formatting> and press <formatting role="bold">OK</formatting>.</para>
</listItem>
<listItem>
<para>If you are in the United States or Canada, highlight <formatting role="bold">TV display:NTSC</formatting> and press <formatting role="bold">OK</formatting> as shown in Figure 1 below.</para>
</listItem>
<listItem>
<para>Press <formatting role="bold">OK </formatting>a second time to switch to TV display.</para>
</listItem>
<listItem>
<para>To return to the menus and content on the Portable Media Center, unplug the TV connector from the Portable Media Center and the device will recognize it. Or you can navigate back to TV out on the screen and select <formatting role="bold">display on device</formatting>.</para></listItem>
</list>
 <captionedObject>
        <object src="/windowsxp/images/expertzone/columns/bowman/TVOUT.jpg" alt="Windows Mobile-based Portable Media Center thumbnail view of digital images" />
        <caption>Figure 1: Setting up the Windows Mobile-based Portable Media Center to play recorded TV files on a connected TV..
</caption>
</captionedObject>
</section>
<section><title>A Quality TV Watching Experience</title>
<para>Video and image quality is visually stunning on the Portable Media Center. Even transcoded recorded TV is gorgeous on the small display. My digital pictures look great. And my music sounds terrific. I prefer to use Shure E5 sound isolation earphones rather than the manufacturer supplied earbuds. I recommend isolation earphones for any audiophile that adopts a Portable Media Center.  </para>
<para>Watching the video on a full-size TV screen produced better results than I expected. Taking a device like this when I travel on business means I can watch the TV I want, rather than flipping through cable channels in a strange city. And why rent movies in a hotel room if you can bring your own this easily? A lot of things catch your imagination when you can carry this much digital media so easily.</para>
<para> Recorded TV playback looked pretty good on a 27-inch standard TV screen. It was better (a subjective opinion) than VHS. My experience so far has shown that TV Out quality is better on a smaller TV than a larger one. </para>
<para>You can also view pictures, videos, and recorded TV on the Portable Media Center screen and play the audio through external speakers with the right cables and connectors. To do this, you use the headphone/earphone out port. I have a D-Link <link xlinkHref="http://www.dlink.com/products/?pid=290">DSM-910T</link> Bluetooth wireless stereo adapter that arrived with all the cables and connectors I needed to connect to a Sony DA-4ES home theater receiver in my living room.</para>
 
 </section>
 <section><title>Transcoding from a Computer to a Portable Media Center</title>
<para>Windows Media Player 10 synchronizes recorded TV files on a Portable Media Center by first transcoding it to a much smaller file size. Recorded TV files are transcoded to Windows Media Video (WMV) format using a process that reduces the image from full TV size to a size more appropriate for a 3.8 inch screen. The following table shows the file size reduction that occurs when you transcode <formatting role="bold">Eddie and the Cruisers II:Eddie Lives!</formatting> which I recorded from Flix at the <formatting role="bold">Best </formatting>quality setting on my Windows XP Media Center Edition PC.</para>
   

 </section>
 <section><title>Transcoding TV Time Estimates</title>
 <dataTable>

        <fieldDefinitions>

          <field type="anyText">

            <label>Movie Running Time</label>

          </field>

          <field type="anyText">

            <label>Original DVR-MS File Size</label>

          </field>

          <field type="anyText">

            <label>Transcoded File Size</label>

          </field>

          <field type="anyText">

            <label>Transcoding time</label>

          </field>

        </fieldDefinitions>

    <section>

          <record>

            
            <field>

              <para>1 hour 49 minutes</para>

            </field>
             <field>

              <para>5.52GB (gigabytes) using “Best” quality</para>

            </field>

            <field>
<para>573.85MB (megabytes)</para>
 </field>
<field>
<para>2 to 4 hours</para>
</field>
</record>       
</section>
</dataTable>
<title>Transcoding TV Time Estimates</title>
<para>Transcoding the recorded TV files from my Windows XP Media Center Edition PC does take some time. A one-hour show takes about one hour to transcode and if the computer is busy with other tasks, it could take up to two hours to transcode.</para>
<para>My timings and experience are based on recording TV at Media Center Edition’s <formatting role="bold">Best</formatting> quality. With a lower original recorded TV quality setting (such as <formatting role="bold">Good </formatting>or <formatting role="bold">Fair</formatting>) the initial file size is smaller and transcoding should be a little faster. If you have a large collection of recorded TV shows, it may take a while to first synchronize your entire collection. Note that transcoding does occur in the background, so you can still use your computer while files are being synchronized.</para>

</section>
<section
><title>How to Get Up and Running Fast.</title>
<para>Rather than synchronizing your entire collection of digital media, you can start by synchronizing selected music and selected images to get familiar with how the process works.</para>
<para><formatting role="bold">To synchronize selected files from a Windows XP Media Center Edition PC to a Portable Media Center device, start Windows Media Player 10 and then use the following steps:</formatting></para>
<list class="ordered">
<listItem><para>Click the <formatting role="bold">Library </formatting>tab in Windows Media Player 10.</para></listItem>
<listItem><para>Click the arrow next to <formatting role="bold">Now Playing</formatting> and select <formatting role="bold">New List, Playlist</formatting>.</para></listItem>
<listItem><para>Click to expand the <formatting role="bold">All Music </formatting>list in the right pane.</para></listItem>
<listItem><para>Add a few artists or albums to the playlist by dragging and dropping to <formatting role="bold">Now Playing</formatting> pane.</para></listItem>
<listItem><para>Click to collapse the <formatting role="bold">All Music</formatting> list and expand <formatting role="bold">All Pictures</formatting>.</para></listItem>
<listItem><para>Select <formatting role="bold">Event </formatting>or <formatting role="bold">Date </formatting>(Event corresponds to folders within <formatting role="bold">My Pictures</formatting>).</para></listItem>
<listItem><para>Drag your selection to the <formatting role="bold">Playlist </formatting>pane.</para></listItem>
<listItem><para>On the top of the <formatting role="bold">Playlist </formatting>pane, click the drop down arrow next to <formatting role="bold">New Playlist.</formatting></para></listItem>
<listItem><para>Select <formatting role="bold">Save Playlist As</formatting> then type a name for your playlist in the <formatting role="bold">File Name</formatting> box.</para></listItem>
<listItem><para>Connect your Portable Media Center to your computer, and then click the <formatting role="bold">Sync </formatting>tab in Windows Media Player 10.</para></listItem>
<listItem><para>Click <formatting role="bold">Start Sync</formatting> and Windows Media Player 10 will transcode and synchronize files on the Portable Media Center.</para></listItem>
</list>
<para>To see how recorded TV displays on your new Portable Media Center, if a list of recorded TV shows is not already available in the Library, you can quickly add them to the library: </para>
<list class="ordered">
<listItem><para>On your home computer, open Windows Media Player 10, and right-click on the Menu bar.</para></listItem>
<listItem><para>When the Shortcut menu displays, select <formatting role="bold">Tools</formatting>, then <formatting role="bold">Search for Media Files</formatting>.</para></listItem>
<listItem><para>Click the <formatting role="bold">Browse </formatting>button.</para></listItem>
<listItem><para>In the <formatting role="bold">Browse For Folder</formatting> window, expand <formatting role="bold">Shared Documents</formatting>, click <formatting role="bold">Recorded TV</formatting>, then click <formatting role="bold">OK </formatting>.</para></listItem>
<listItem><para>Click <formatting role="bold">Search</formatting>. Any recorded TV files from your home Windows XP Media Center Edition PC will be added to the library.</para> </listItem>
</list> 
<para>You can drag shows you wish to sync to the <formatting role="bold">Now Playing</formatting> list or you can right click a show to add it to a playlist (such as "TV to Sync").</para>
<para><formatting role="bold">To set up automatic synchronization on the device:
</formatting></para>
<list class="ordered">
<listItem><para>Start Windows Media Player 10.</para></listItem>
<listItem><para>Click the <formatting role="bold">Sync </formatting>tab.</para></listItem>
<listItem><para>Click <formatting role="bold">Set up Sync</formatting>.</para></listItem>
<listItem><para>In the <formatting role="bold">Synchronization Settings</formatting> dialog box (see Figure 2), click to select the <formatting role="bold">Synchronize device automatically</formatting> check box.</para></listItem>
<listItem><para>Click to select the check boxes for the playlists that you want to synchronize, and click to clear the check boxes for the playlists that you do not want to synchronize.</para></listItem>
<listItem><para>After you have selected the check boxes that are next to the items that you want to synchronize with your Portable Media Center, click <formatting role="bold">OK</formatting>.</para></listItem>
</list> 
 <captionedObject>
        <object src="/windowsxp/images/expertzone/columns/bowman/tvsynccustom.jpg" alt="Choosing playlists to synchronize with Windows Mobile-based Portable Media Center " />
        <caption>Figure 2: Choosing playlists to synchronize with Windows Mobile-based Portable Media Center</caption>
</captionedObject>
   <para>The TV shows you’ve selected will be transcoded and synchronized with the PMC. (This may take some time if you’ve selected a 2-hour movie.)</para>
   
</section>
<section> <title>My Quest for the Perfect Portable Entertainment Device</title>
    <para>It seems like I’ve been looking for ways to take music and other entertainment with me for most of my life. It started with my old Channel Master radio on which music selection was limited to the AM dial.</para>
    <captionedObject>
        <object src="/windowsxp/images/expertzone/columns/bowman/channelmaster.jpg" alt="Windows Mobile-based Portable Media Center thumbnail view of digital images" />
        <caption>Figure 3: My old Channel Master radio
</caption>
</captionedObject>
<para>I’ve owned several Sony Walkman cassette players, and the last one, a Sports Walkman (shown below) ran on a single AA battery for about 5 hours. I had to carry a briefcase sized cassette carrier with me. </para>
<para>I’ve owned a few Sony Discman players but I still had to carry a wallet full of CDs. </para>
<para>I’ve also had a few digital music players, the Creative Nomad II, the Creative Muvo 256 MV USB player, and a Creative Zen Xtra 40GB hard drive player. Digital music on these players is a great convenience, but it’s still only music and not video or pictures.</para>
<para>And then the ultimate portable device arrived in the form of the Creative Zen Portable Media Center (Figure 4 lower right). All of my music fits on this device, plus my digital pictures and my recorded TV. I could navigate using readable color menus. Battery life is 7-8 hours for music, and approximately 3 hours for TV or videos. </para>
<captionedObject>
        <object src="/windowsxp/images/expertzone/columns/bowman/players.jpg" alt="Windows Mobile-based Portable Media Center thumbnail view of digital images" />
        <caption>Figure 4: Some of the players I've tried pale next to the Portable Media Center (lower right)
</caption>
</captionedObject>
<para>A few college bound students who’ve had the opportunity to see my Portable Media Center are already planning to buy one (or have their moms and dads buy one) for the start of the Fall semester. </para>
<para>You can visit the Portable Media Center Web site <link xlinkHref="http://www.microsoft.com/windowsmobile/portablemediacenter/default.mspx">http://www.microsoft.com/windowsmobile/portablemediacenter/default.mspx</link> to learn where you can buy one. </para>    
   
    
<para><formatting role="italic">Barb Bowman enjoys sharing her own experiences and insights into today's leading edge technologies. She is a product development manager for Comcast High-Speed Internet, but her views here are strictly personal.</formatting></para>
   </section>
  </body>
</content>