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ActiveMovie
ActiveMovie was the immediate ancestor of Windows Media Player 6.x, and was a streaming media technology now known as DirectShow, developed by Microsoft to replace Video for Windows. ActiveMovie allows users to view media streams, whether distributed via the Internet, an intranet or CD-ROMs. Originally announced in March 1996, the first version was released in May 1996 bundled with the beta version of Internet Explorer, Internet Explorer 3.0. When ActiveMovie was installed an option was added to the Start Menu to launch the ''ActiveMovie Control''. This allowed users to play multimedia files and thus was a rudimentary media player. In March 1997, Microsoft announced that ActiveMovie was going to become part of the DirectX set of technologies, and by July it was being referred to as DirectShow. Version 5.2 of Windows Media Player would remove the ''ActiveMovie Control'' icon from the Start Menu upon installation. Microsoft provided instructions for reinstalling the icon on its ...
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Video For Windows
Video for Windows was a suite of video-playing and editing software introduced by Microsoft in 1992. A runtime version for viewing videos only was made available as a free add-on to Windows 3.1, which then became an integral component of Windows 95. Video for Windows was mostly replaced by the July 1996 release of ActiveMovie, later known as DirectShow. Overview Video for Windows was first introduced in November 1992. It was developed as a reaction to Apple Computer's QuickTime technology, which added digital video to the Macintosh platform. Costing around $200, the product included video editing software, editing and transcoding, encoding programs for use with video input boards. A runtime version for viewing videos only was also made available as a free add-on to Windows 3.1 and Windows 3.11; it then became an integral component of Windows 95 and later. Like QuickTime, Video for Windows had three key aspects: Audio Video Interleave (AVI), a container file format designed to sto ...
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