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{{Infobox Software
{{Infobox Software
| name = RealPlayer
| name = RealPlayer

Revision as of 13:44, 13 March 2009

--Infobox needs updating with latest version information

RealPlayer
Developer(s)RealNetworks
Initial release4.0
Stable releaseWindows: 24.0.0.311 (July 12, 2024; 32 days ago (2024-07-12)) [±]

OS X: 12.0.1.1750 (September 7, 2012; 11 years ago (2012-09-07)[1]) [±]

Windows Mobile: 1.1 (July 30, 2009; 15 years ago (2009-07-30)[2]) [±]

Android: 1.52 (June 21, 2022; 2 years ago (2022-06-21)) [±]
Preview release16.0 (TBA) [±]
Operating systemCross-platform
Available inEnglish,Simplified & Traditional Chinese, German, French, Korean, Italian, Japanese as well as Portuguese.
TypeMedia player
LicenseProprietary
Websitewww.real.com

RealPlayer (briefly known also as RealOne Player) is a proprietary cross-platform media player by RealNetworks that plays a number of multimedia formats including MP3, MPEG-4, QuickTime, Windows Media, and multiple versions of proprietary RealAudio and RealVideo formats.[3]

The first version of RealPlayer was introduced in April 1995 as RealAudio Player, one of the first media players capable of streaming media over the Internet.[4] Version 6 of RealPlayer was called RealPlayer G2; version 9 was called RealOne Player. Free "Basic" versions have been provided as well as paid "Plus" versions with additional features. On Windows, version 9 subsumed the features of the separate program RealJukebox.

RealPlayer 11 was released for Windows in November 2007, and for Mac OS X in May 2008. Versions of RealPlayer are also available for Linux, Unix, Palm OS, Windows Mobile, and Symbian OS.[5] The program is powered by an underlying open source media engine called Helix.[6]

RealPlayer was a popular streaming media player during the early years of the Internet, but in recent years it has been surpassed in market share by Windows Media Player and, since mid-2007, Apple's iTunes.[7]

Features

RealPlayer, beyond its function as an audio/video player, also contains additional features such as:

  • Media Browser based on Internet Explorer which allows web browsing while playing media.
  • Playlist editor similar to other media players, supporting "drag and drop" and playlist randomize.
  • Theater Mode (full screen mode) video playback. The paid version offers a skinnable Toolbar Mode which uses less desktop space.
  • Visualizations - graphical animations or "light shows". Five are included with RealPlayer set-up. Others are available from RealNetworks, including a 3D Visualization Plug-In Surreal.FX.
  • Continuous Play (Loop multiple songs) and Shuffle Play (Play tracks randomly, however realplayer will select the random tracks in sequence eg Track 1, Track 5, Track 2, Track 6, Track 3 etc.).
  • Stay on top while playing option.
  • Favorites menu to save and recall media locations for files or streams.
  • Equalizer and Video controls. Crossfade and Gapless playback are included in RealPlayer Plus.
  • Media library allows organization of media through track tagging and editing. The Premium version adds Audio Converter to convert between RealMedia, MP3, AAC, Windows Media, and WAV formats, and others.
  • Recording audio, (RealPlayer Plus only) which records audio via a sound card.
  • LivePause pauses streaming video clips without having to stop the buffering.
  • Version 10.5 included Harmony technology, making the Music Store compatible with iPod and Windows Media DRM-compatible players.
  • Both the basic and the plus version can burn CDs. The current burning technology is powered by NPI; formerly it was powered by Adaptec (Roxio). The free version can burn audio and data CDs; the premium version burns MP3 CDs.
  • CD ripping into AAC (in MP4) (32 kbit/s - 320 kbit/s) (default), Real Audio 10 (32 kbit/s - 320 kbit/s), MP3 (32 kbit/s - 320 kbit/s), Real Audio Lossless, WAV (1411 kbit/s), Windows Media Audio (Requires Windows Media Player 10 installed) (64 kbit/s - 192 kbit/s) formats.
  • RealPlayer Music Store allows users to locate, preview, and purchase songs, which cost $0.49 to $0.99.
  • SuperPass - paid access to premium recorded and live video broadcasts. In the U.S., content like CBS Big Brother 24/7 is provided for a fee of around USD$39.99. For Europe (except UK), this includes live broadcasts of BBC World Europe, Al Jazeera English, CNN International Europe, Euronews in seven languages, BBC News recent news clips, MTV UK music clips, and custom content from SportsNews TV, RealTV, Vidzone, and Comedy Time. Costs 17.50 € per month.
  • Video Download - version 11 for Windows allowed users to download videos from sites such as YouTube and store them on their computer in Flash Video format.

Supported media formats

Formats supported by optional plug-ins

Plug-ins

RealPlayer has a wide variety of plug-ins. Some of the plug-ins are listed at the RealPlayer accessories page, but not all.

Audio Enhancement
There are four audio "enhancers" available for the latest version of RealPlayer. DFX, iQfx, Volume Logic, and Sanyo 3D Surround. Lake PLS, created by Lake Technologies, works only with RealJukebox, and has limited use. There are some registry tweaks which allow Lake PLS to work with RealPlayer 10. Lake PLS is still available on the RealPlayer website.
RealPlayer Skin Creators
RealPlayer has had two skin creator plug-ins: SkinsEditor for RealJukebox -- an easy to use skins creator made by DeYoung software. The second application, RealJukebox Skins Converter, converts Winamp skins into RealPlayer skins.
Playback Plug-Ins
Please see section File formats supported by a plug-in.
Radio Tuners
vTuner Plus and HMRadio are radio tuners specially created for RealPlayer.
Visualizations
The available visualizations from the RealNetworks site are: FrequencywurX, FyrewurX, FlamewurX, XFactor, Spectrl View, FluxWave, Puddle, Paint Drops, Polka dots, StickSterZ 1.0, Circle, On the road, Real Logo, Hubble Bubble. There are some more visualization plug-ins like Surreal.FX by RealNetworks, G-Force and WhiteCap by SoundSpectrum and SticksterZ 1.1 by Eric Metois.
Firefox Browser Download (Firefox Add-on)
Real Player has a browser download add-on for Firefox (currently v1.0) which allows users to download video from a video player window (pop-up menu above top-right side of video player).
ScrobrealPlayer
an audioscrobbler plugin that connects RealPlayer with the Last.FM social music network.

Editions

RealPlayer for Windows

RealPlayer for personal use includes audio CD burning capabilities, DVR-style playback buffering, multimedia search, Internet radio, a jukebox-style file library, an embedded web browser (using Microsoft Internet Explorer), and the ability to transfer media to a number of portable devices, including Apple's iPod, MP3 players, and Windows Media devices. Since version 11, RealPlayer also includes Flash Video support, DVD, SVCD, VCD burning and video recording (DRM is supported). The free version is not currently available for 64-bit versions of Windows. The BBC offers an advertising-free version for users of its website.

RealPlayer Enterprise is a free lightweight advertising-free version for business. It can be administered by RealPlayer Enterprise Manager. Most consumer features have been removed from this version, and some plug-ins are not supported. Its RealSched.exe can be disabled in two steps, and it is not reinstalled upon running the player.

The current stable release for Windows is version 11.

RealPlayer for Mac OS X

File:RealPlayer browser.png
RealPlayer's browser showing the RealPlayer Wikipedia page.

RealPlayer for Mac OS X is distributed for free. The latest current stable release as of June 2008 is version 11.0. It includes Real's Helix playback engine for RealAudio and RealVideo, a 10-band equalizer and video adjustment controls, and a full-screen, resizable "theater mode" for video playback, as well as many features found in its Windows counterpart.

Since the release of version 10.0 in 2004[39] [40], RealPlayer has become much more closely integrated with Mac OS X including features such as:

  • QuickTime playback support (including full-screen viewing which Apple only introduced to its own basic QuickTime Player in 2007)
  • An integrated Web browser based on Apple's WebKit framework, resulting in RealPlayer and Safari sharing cookies.
  • Support for Bonjour to share Internet favorites.
  • Cocoa user interface.

RealPlayer for Linux/Unix

RealPlayer for Linux/Unix is developed separately from the Windows and Mac versions.[citation needed] The client is based on the open-source Helix Player which can be found at the Helix Community Website. It supports RealAudio/Video, MP3 and Ogg Vorbis. The interface depends on the current GTK+ theme.

RealPlayer for Symbian

The Symbian version of RealPlayer allows mobile phones to play Real Audio, Real Video, MP3, 3GP, AMR and other media formats. It is provided as freeware.

RealPlayer for Palm

RealPlayer 1.6.1 (US) or RealPlayer 1.6.0 (worldwide) is available for free for PalmOne-made Palm OS 5 devices, such as the Palm Tungsten or Zire series.[41] It is also compatible with RealPlayer Music Store tracks. However, they will neither install nor run on non-PalmOne-made devices like Sony's Clie line of PDAs. They also do not support modern Palm smartphones such as the treo 700p, 755p, or Centro, although the treo 600 and 650 are listed as supported devices. Their Web page regarding PalmOS support (shown above) gives no indication if support for those devices will ever be provided.

RealJukebox

RealJukebox was a computer program released by RealNetworks that allowed users to organise their digital music. It was first released in May 1999. By late 2001 the functions of the program had been integrated into the Real's core media player program, RealPlayer.

Criticism

File:Realplayer message center.JPG
RealPlayer's Message Center has been criticized for its pop-up advertisements.

Past versions of RealPlayer have been criticized for containing features similar to adware and spyware. In 2006 PC World Magazine named RealPlayer (1999 Version) as #2 in its list of the 25 worst products of all time, writing that RealPlayer "had a disturbing way of making itself a little too much at home on your PC--installing itself as the default media player, taking liberties with your Windows Registry, popping up annoying 'messages' that were really just advertisements, and so on."[42] In 2007, it placed RealPlayer, versions 1996-2004, at #5 in its list of the 20 most annoying tech products.[43]

In 2008 StopBadware.org called RealPlayer "badware" due to failure to completely disclose software components it installs as well as those it leaves behind after being un-installed.[44] Jeff Chasen, vice president for RealPlayer, responded by stating: "I actually admire what stopbadware is trying to do to keep consumers safe. But in this case the only thing bad is the report itself. Here’s why: Not a single claim raised by stopbadware actually hurts anyone." [45]

The Message Center of RealPlayer has caused controversy due to its feature of pop-up advertisements. In previous versions of the program the Message Center had a reputation for being difficult to turn off completely, while in RealPlayer 11 it will not appear unless it is turned on by the user. [45]

In 1999 security researcher Richard M. Smith dissected some of RealJukebox's network traffic and discovered that it was sending a unique identifier with information about the music titles to which its users were listening.[46][47] RealNetworks acknowledged this, and the feature was removed in version 1.02. Their download page stated RealJukebox included privacy enhancements and gave a link to the privacy policy.[42]

When RealPlayer is installed, a process called tkbell.exe will run automatically each time the computer starts up, and may appear on the list of active processes as realsched.exe. The process is linked to the Message Center and can also check for updates to the program. The process is non-essential and is not considered to be harmful, but has been seen as a nuisance by some users. [48] It can be disabled by altering the settings of RealPlayer's Message Center. [49]

Earlier versions of RealPlayer have experienced an issue with the volume control, where muting the sound in the program would also mute Windows system sounds. [50] This issue appears to have been resolved in RealPlayer 11.[citation needed]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ http://service.real.com/realplayer/security/09072012_player/en/
  2. ^ "RealPlayer 1.1". Ewandoo. Retrieved 20 February 2015.
  3. ^ Supported Formats by RealOne Player
  4. ^ Release History
  5. ^ RealPlayer - Multiple Editions
  6. ^ Helix Community License
  7. ^ iTunes Passes RealPlayer in Unique Users
  8. ^ AT&T A2B
  9. ^ Adobe SVG
  10. ^ Audible Audio
  11. ^ DiamondBack Vision Partners With Media 100 To Explore MPEG-4 Internet Streaming Solution For Cleaner(TM) (Object Video)
  12. ^ eBeam Presenter Download
  13. ^ Digital Bitcasting
  14. ^ Envivio Announces MPEG-4 Support for RealPlayer
  15. ^ Even Technologies - PSI Decoder
  16. ^ LearnKey RealCBT
  17. ^ RealPlayer supports Liquid Audio
  18. ^ VP5 Plug-In Download
  19. ^ a b RealPlayer to support VP5 Cite error: The named reference "vp3" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  20. ^ Supported RealPlayer Formats
  21. ^ rNSV for RealPlayer Formats
  22. ^ Crescendo Forte Plug-In Info
  23. ^ Camtasia for RealPlayer info
  24. ^ Xiph OGG for RealPlayer Download
  25. ^ RichFX Plugin Download
  26. ^ Mode2Real Info and download
  27. ^ Mimio boardCast Info
  28. ^ Mimio Plug-In Download
  29. ^ Be Here To Debut Its iVideo Plug-in At Real Conference 2000
  30. ^ iPix Plug-In Download
  31. ^ ScreenWatch Plug-In Download
  32. ^ RealNetworks Acquires Vivo
  33. ^ RealPlayer to support MJuice
  34. ^ RealPlayer Supported Formats (Blue Matter)
  35. ^ OZ.Com announces fluid3d for RealPlayer
  36. ^ RealNetworks backs IBM digital music system
  37. ^ VP4 for RealPlayer is available
  38. ^ ImagePower's JPEG2000 Technology Compatible with RealPlayer
  39. ^ RealNetworks announces RealPlayer 10 for Mac OS X
  40. ^ Release notes from Versiontracker
  41. ^ RealPlayer for palmOne Handhelds
  42. ^ a b Tynan, Dan (2006-03-26). "The 25 Worst Tech Products of All Time". PC World. Retrieved 2007-01-01.
  43. ^ Tynan, Dan (2007-04-16). "The 20 Most Annoying Tech Products". PC World. Retrieved 2007-04-17.
  44. ^ StopBadware.org
  45. ^ a b Real’s Response to stopbadware.org
  46. ^ Richard M. Smith (1999-10-31). "The RealJukebox Monitoring System". computerbytesman.com. Retrieved 2007-02-07. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  47. ^ Amy Borrus (2000-02-14). "The Privacy War of Richard Smith". businessweek.com. Retrieved 2007-02-05. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  48. ^ What is tkbell.exe?
  49. ^ Help2Go - Disable RealPlayer realsched.exe
  50. ^ Adjusting RealPlayer volume affects Comp volume settings