Recommended Posts

Nice bragging. :rolleyes:

I'm merely pointing out the facts from the fiction :) . I neither have access to the build nor will it be released, just trying to make it clear where they came from etc. Besides, I'm not the only person who saw the person that showed the pics. Prince also saw the information from the same place/person.

Edited by Arneh

well for those peaple who think WMP10 is better has not used WMP11 i take it .

The Media Library in Windows Media Player 11 has been redesigned to make it easier to navigate and use your music collection. You'll minimize the time you spend managing your music and maximize the time you spend enjoying it. You can now view your music by album cover just as you do when you browse your CD collection. Use the new wordwheel search to quickly find what you're looking for. Stack the views of your music collection and enjoy the improved presentation of the artist, track, and CD information. Experience your digital music the way you want, and enjoy a smooth, high-quality audio playback experience.

All that means new technolagy behind the UI running makeing thins simplier, dont for get microsoft has querie searching like Itunes so as you type in the seachbar for your music it will start showing results . just thauhgt ide inform you WMP10 users who have not yet tried it and possably thinking WMP11 is justa new UI look and that is it

where can i download WMP 11?

Read the whole thread first before asking that question :whistle: .

PSG22

Skin for WMP10:http://www.filelodge.com/files/hdd4/61968/WMP11.zip

It's not that great, it's not completely like WMP11, and the guy's address is at the top. Just wanted to give you fair warning.

Edit: http://thevista.ru/files/mutogens/wmp11ski...TheVista.ru.rar is the same but without the address at the top.

Edited by Night Hawk

Nice bragging. :rolleyes:

Thats all winbeta ever does now adays. :( pretty sad thats what they have to resort to

Also hes a moron because masterhack MADE that vista-like theme for xp. Those screenshots also came from topsidepornstar. http://www.topsidepornstar.com/?p=49 Which is dated april 5th a few weeks before winbeta "bragging crap we-have-the-build-and-your-not-going-to-get-it!!!!!111oneoen shots" showed up

Beat that! :whistle:

Thats all winbeta ever does now adays. :( pretty sad thats what they have to resort to

Also hes a moron because masterhack MADE that vista-like theme for xp. Those screenshots also came from topsidepornstar. http://www.topsidepornstar.com/?p=49 Which is dated april 5th a few weeks before winbeta "bragging crap we-have-the-build-and-your-not-going-to-get-it!!!!!111oneoen shots" showed up

Beat that! :whistle:

exactly.

Thats all winbeta ever does now adays. :( pretty sad thats what they have to resort to

Also hes a moron because masterhack MADE that vista-like theme for xp. Those screenshots also came from topsidepornstar. http://www.topsidepornstar.com/?p=49 Which is dated april 5th a few weeks before winbeta "bragging crap we-have-the-build-and-your-not-going-to-get-it!!!!!111oneoen shots" showed up

Beat that! :whistle:

Unfortunately, those WMP11 screenshots on XP of 6140 are indeed fake, in terms of them not being XP but rather from Vista. They are nothing more than the Wmp11 build running in Vista 5342 under compatibility mode as I've said a countless number of times now. If you had looked at the Wmp11 screenshot from win-vista, then you would see that masterhack's Wmp is the same exact build as the 5342 one, and, as can be seen in 5365, one can run Wmp11 in Vista under compatibility mode and see the XP skin which is undoubtedly what was done for 6140. Without any more proof such as a whole desktop screenshot with the winver etc., there's no way to tell for sure that 6140 is on XP, and considering that the "About" window is using the Vista non-glass theme just as 5365's Wmp11 is, then its more logical to say that they are indeed from Vista.

4779 however is a real XP Wmp11 build.

As for bragging, no I'm not bragging about having the build as I don't have it. In fact there's only 1 person who has the build and it will not get leaked. I was merely stating where the shots originated from since no one had mentioned it yet as Prince didn't want to give out the source, and if you consider that bragging, well then you've got some issues.

Edited by Arneh
This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Python programmers in a nutshell. Now, guess what lang most AI programmers use... :-)
    • There was nothing whatsoever wrong with Vista as an OS after the SP1 update. People who claim it wasn't were using ancient machines for some silly reason. Not kidding, no hyperbole/exaggeration. Vista was good.
    • Windows ME was worse.
    • Dude, im talking about simply disable it from settings app. Because of the eu regulation, you could disable it here for years.
    • One big question about Mars was answered thanks to Einstein's 100 year old theory by Sayan Sen Image via DepositPhotos Scientists at the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have calculated how time passes on Mars compared with Earth, adding detail to how timekeeping would need to work beyond Earth’s orbit. The study, published in The Astronomical Journal, found that clocks on Mars run an average of 477 microseconds, or millionths of a second, faster per day than clocks on Earth. A microsecond is one millionth of a second, a very small unit used in precise scientific timing systems such as atomic clocks, which measure time using consistent atomic behavior. This difference is not constant. Because Mars moves around the Sun in a non-circular path (an eccentric orbit, meaning its distance from the Sun changes over time instead of staying fixed) and is affected by gravity from other bodies, the daily difference can vary by as much as 226 microseconds over a Martian year. The study also identifies smaller repeating changes of about 40 microseconds per day linked to synodic cycles (repeating periods that describe how planets line up with each other as they orbit the Sun from different positions). These longer patterns affect how time differences slowly rise and fall. To make these estimates, researchers compared Mars with Earth and the Moon. The work looks at relativistic proper time (the time actually measured by a clock depending on its speed and the strength of gravity where it is located, as described in Einstein’s relativity). This shows that each world has its own slightly different “rate” of time. This becomes more important as space missions expand into cislunar space (the region between Earth and the Moon) and toward Mars. On Earth, time systems rely on atomic clocks and satellites, which stay closely synchronized for navigation and communication. The study is based on Albert Einstein’s theory of relativity, which shows that time is affected by gravity and motion. Stronger gravity makes clocks run slower, while weaker gravity makes them run faster. “The time is just right for the Moon and Mars,” said NIST physicist Bijunath Patla. “This is the closest we have been to realizing the science fiction vision of expanding across the solar system.” A day on Mars is about 40 minutes longer than on Earth, and a Martian year lasts 687 Earth days. But the main question is not just about days and years, but how fast time itself passes. An atomic clock placed on Mars would function normally, but compared with one on Earth, the two would slowly drift apart due to differences in gravity and motion. This requires careful calculation of what is similar to a time-zone difference across planets. Researchers modeled Mars using a reference surface and included gravitational effects from the Sun, Earth, the Moon, and other planets. This includes a multi-body gravitational system (often described as a three-body or four-body problem, where predicting motion becomes difficult because multiple large objects all pull on each other at the same time through gravity). Mars also follows a Keplerian orbit (an idealized elliptical orbit based on simple gravitational laws that assume smooth motion, before adding real-world disturbances from other bodies). In addition, the researchers accounted for solar tides (small changes in gravitational force caused by the Sun that slightly distort planetary motion and timing, especially in systems involving Earth and the Moon). These combined effects are described as relativistic proper-time offsets (small but measurable differences in elapsed time between locations caused by gravity and motion), which must be included when comparing clocks across planets. “But for Mars, that’s not the case. Its distance from the Sun and its eccentric orbit make the variations in time larger. A three-body problem is extremely complicated. Now we’re dealing with four: the Sun, Earth, the Moon and Mars,” Patla explained. “The heavy lifting was more challenging than I initially thought.” Although the differences are extremely small, they matter for navigation and communication systems that depend on precise timing. Even modern networks on Earth, such as mobile systems, rely on timing accuracy at very small fractions of a second. Communication between Earth and Mars currently takes about four to 24 minutes or more depending on planetary positions, meaning signals are not real-time. A shared and accurate time system could help future missions reduce confusion in navigation and data exchange. “If you get synchronization, it will be almost like real-time communication without any loss of information. You don’t have to wait to see what happens,” Patla said. Researchers note that fully developed interplanetary communication networks are still far in the future. However, understanding how time behaves across planets helps prepare for those systems. “It may be decades before the surface of Mars is covered by the tracks of wandering rovers, but it is useful now to study the issues involved in establishing navigation systems on other planets and moons,” said Neil Ashby. “Like current global navigation systems like GPS, these systems will depend on accurate clocks, and the effects on clock rates can be analyzed with the help of Einstein’s general theory of relativity.” Patla added that the results also help improve understanding of time itself under relativity. “It's good to know for the first time what is happening on Mars timewise. Nobody knew that before. It improves our knowledge of the theory itself, the theory of how clocks tick and relativity,” he said. Source: NIST, IOPscience This article was generated with some help from AI and reviewed by an editor. Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, this material is used for the purpose of news reporting. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Grand Master
      Jaybonaut went up a rank
      Grand Master
    • One Year In
      Philsl earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Dedicated
      Scoobystu earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • First Post
      Tom Schmidt earned a badge
      First Post
    • One Month Later
      D0nn13 earned a badge
      One Month Later
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      443
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      177
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      124
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      78
    5. 5
      Xenon
      76
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!