There’s a tendency among Media Center enthusiasts to focus on advanced features, especially those that are related to TV. As the owner of two CableCARD-equipped Vista Media Center PCs and a slew of extenders, I know I think of Media Center as strictly a high-end living-room device.
For Windows 7 Inside Out, I’m responsible for the digital media chapters, including our coverage of Windows Media Center. In using the program on my desktop PC I’ve been extremely impressed so far by the little stuff that you don’t notice until you have used a program for a while.
In particular, I like the way that the Media Center team has enhanced the way I can tag songs and pictures as favorites (using a scale of 1-5 stars) and then filter my playlist or slide show to just those items. New in Windows 7 is top-level menu placement for a Play Favorites option, which replaces the Play All option in both the Music and Pictures strip.
To choose which items from my library get played as favorites, I can use high rating (4 or 5 stars), or create a custom playlist or slide show, or designate a folder full of photos. Here, for example, is the Favorite Music setup screen:
That’s nice, but the killer addition is the improvement in the way you tag songs or pictures as favorites. As I noted back in January 2008, it takes seven cumbersome steps with the remote control (or a mouse) to rate a song or picture in Windows Vista Media Center:
Isn’t that overly complicated? You should be able to get to the rating screen for any song with no more than one or two button presses.
And now you can. The first time you rate an item in Windows 7’s Media Center, you see this option:

Press OK to enable shortcuts, and from that point on the number keys on the remote control (or the keyboard) allow you to instantly add ratings to the current song or picture. You’re listening to a song and you hate it? Pick up the remote and press 1. Love it? Press 5. I especially like the ability to go through a folder full of newly imported photos and rate each one with a single button press.
This kind of improvement doesn’t get much notice in first-look reviews. But in day to day use, it’s one of those things you quickly learn to appreciate. I’m actually seeing a lot of small but genuinely useful improvements like this as I dig into Windows 7.