Seperating Pictures & Videos has been mentioned before. This would like be a good thing.
What i also would like to be to do is created some kind of submenu's for various types of videos.
It should be possible to create various categories of video material and have each "type" only watch certain folders.
- create a menu item "movies" and let that item watch D:\Multimedia\Movies
- create a menu item "series" and let that item watch D:\Multimedia\Series
- create a menu item "music clips" and let that item watch D:\Multimedia\Music Clips
- create a menu item "home videos" and let that item watch D:\Multimedia\Home Videos
Also keep going to the right in a strip should return to the beginning item like it's possible in the album selection under music
I am not quite sure if this really falls in the category start menu, but me and my girlfriend hate it that it's not possible to use the computer while having media center open on a secondary display.
Our Vista computer is in our living room with a primary Samsung TFT monitor for daily use and a secondary Samsung LCD TV for Media Center use.
When VMC is opened full screen on the secondary display, the window "claims" the focus of the mouse. The cursor is trapped on the secondary monitor.
Only pressing the Windows key on the keyboard to show the start menu button on my primary monitor enables me to reclaim my mouse to launch internet explorer or outlook on the primary monitor. VMC is now somehow been put to the background.
Using this workaround causes the playing video or recorded tv to be paused. To resume playback I have to press the play button on my keyboard (which happens to have such a key) to resume playback of the video in VMW.
If I use the play button on my Microsoft Media Center Remote, VMC comes back to the foreground and reclaims the mouse cursor after which i can no longer continue surfing the web on the other monitor. The only way to fix it is using the same routine.
I do understand why this happens, because VMC needs to be the active application for the Remote to function properly. It basically is an input device that controls the active application.