Windows 8 Feature Focus: Xbox Video App

Xbox Music may be a mess, but Xbox Video is pretty good

Feature: Xbox Video app
Availability: Windows 8 (all versions, x86/x64), Windows RT

Like Xbox Music, Xbox Video is the Windows 8-based front-end to a cloud service of the same name. But unlike Xbox Music, Xbox Video is straightforward and easy to use, thanks to a less ambitious feature set.

Xbox Video—the service—is Microsoft’s answer to Amazon Instant Video Store and Apple iTunes, allowing you to purchase movies and TV shows and access them from the cloud at any time on a number of different device types. (Like those services, Xbox Video also lets you rent movies on a variety of device types.) There’s no subscription streaming service, like that offered by Netflix or Hulu Plus.

In addition to Windows 8/RT, Xbox Video services the Xbox 360 via the Xbox Video app, Windows 7 PCs via the Zune Music + Videos application, and Windows Phone 7.x devices via Zune sync. Windows Phone 8 handsets are curiously not supported, as I wrote about earlier in Windows Phone 8 Does Not (Currently) Support Xbox Video.

Xbox Video purchases are kept in your cloud collection and are available to stream or download from the Xbox Video app. Theoretically, it’s possible to purchase a video from Xbox Video from any compatible device and watch it from any other compatible device, but I’ve had issues where an HD movie purchase made on the Xbox 360 was not available on other devices; for best results, make your purchases on a Windows 8/RT PC or device.

Note: Newer videos (October 2012 and up) usually support closed captioning, though the bulk of Microsoft’s collection does not.

The Xbox Video app is straightforward. The main view is filled largely with a Spotlight group with tiles representing highlighted TV shows and movies and, curiously, a few advertisements. (See Microsoft Cheapens Windows 8 with Ads for my stance on this terrible decision by Microsoft.)

Off to the right, you will find separate groups for the Movies Store and Television Store. Dive in and you’ll find a visually uninteresting and contextually unhelpful tile-based UI that extends horizontally off-screen. You can view by New Releases, Featured, Top Selling, Genres, or Studios in Movies Store, or by New Releases, Featured, Last Night’s Shows, Top Selling, Genres, or Networks in the Television Store.

If you’d rather look for something specific, your best bet is search, which as always is accessed by the Search charm (WINKEY + Q or Charms, Search). Here, search results are segregated by the two stores-within-a-store, helping you find exactly what you needed.

Much of the content in the Xbox Video service is available in both HD and SD (standard definition) formats, and in the case of movies, is available for purchase or rent. From a movie’s quick card, for example, you can view buying and renting options, explore the movie and find out more, or play the trailer.

Purchases and rentals are made via a full-screen Metro notification interface. And you can use a variety of payment options, including any credit cards associated with your Microsoft account, PayPal, or Microsoft Points (which are also associated with your Microsoft account).

Purchased movies and TV shows are found in My Videos, which is available as a group to the left (off-screen) of Spotlight.

While several tiles representing your purchased content are available here, you can tap the My Videos header to view your cloud collection full screen. This view will feature every Xbox Video purchase you’ve ever made as well as any videos you have stored in your Videos library on the PC/device.

The All view displays all content, of course, while Movies displays purchased movies and TV displays purchased TV shows. The Other view is for your personal content, which includes any other unprotected and compatible videos in your Videos library.

Some have complained that the Xbox Video app offers no way to sort personal videos so that they show up in the Movies or TV views. With the Zune Music + Videos software, for example, you could tag videos as movies or TV shows and assign additional useful meta-data. While I share this frustration, I don’t expect Microsoft to add this capability to the Xbox Video app, which is instead more geared toward mainstream, cloud-based access to purchased and rented video content. But it is certainly a limitation.

The Xbox Video app provides all the expected playback capabilities, and you can stream purchased or rented content, or download it for offline playback. But because Xbox Video fronts a cloud service, you can also switch purchased video playback between your Windows 8/RT PC/device and the Xbox 360. So you could start playback from the console, for example, and finish watching the same movie/TV show later on your device.

Conversely, you could browse for content in the Xbox Video app and then choose to play the content on your console using the Play on Xbox feature, which is available from each video’s quick card or from the playback controls in the app bar.

Play on Xbox requires the Xbox SmartGlass app, which allows your device to work as a remote for playback on the console and, more interestingly, as a second screen experience called Video Guide in compatible movies and TV shows. Video Guide causes your Windows 8/RT device to display each of the characters that are currently on-screen in real time, so you can understand the relationships between the characters and explore the actors’ other work.

(You can return playback to the device using the Play here button in the SmartGlass app’s app bar.)

Play on Xbox only works with content from the Xbox Video store. For personal videos, you can use a related feature called Play To, which streams content from your Windows 8 device to compatible set-top boxes like the Xbox 360.

By providing a much more limited set of functionality than Xbox Music, Xbox Video delivers a more satisfying and complete experience, and this app feels more polished as a result. It won’t satisfy the needs of the minority of users who have ripped their DVD collections, for those who simply wish to play DVD or Blu-Ray movies. But as a Windows 8 front-end to a forward-leaning, cloud-based video service, Xbox Video works pretty well.

Discuss this Article 18

pmbAustin
on Jan 6, 2013

Maybe I can find an answer here, because Google/Bing hasn't helped me out at all.

I ripped a DVD of a TV show I really like. It shows up under "other" in Xbox Video. I've found no way to edit/set the video metadata to indicate this is a TV show, one full season, with a dozen episodes.

ANY help in getting self-ripped video to show up correctly in Xbox music would be greatly appreciated... any utilities for editing video meta-data, and any documentation for what exactly Xbox music is looking for when it displays things would be very helpful.

pthurrott
on Jan 6, 2013

The article has a note about this: There's no way to do that, sorry. In the past, editing the meta data with the Zune software would work, in that application. Not in Xbox Music.

pmbAustin
on Jan 7, 2013

My appologies. I read that as "XBox Video doesn't have the ability to edit/modify/deal-with metadata", rather than "Even if you did successfully modify/edit the metadata, XBox Video will ignore it". Upon re-reading, I see the misunderstanding was mine.

Shame though. It'd be nice if it at least respected the metadata that was there. Fingers crossed that a future update will do exactly that.

GoodThings2Life
on Jan 6, 2013

My only request for Microsoft with Xbox Videos is simple... give me a Video Pass subscription option. Right now, it's just too expensive (and it's one reason I never use iTunes either).

They have an excellent selection (every show I watch), and it's always current (within 24 hours) so they'd be very competitive with Netflix and Amazon if they provided this subscription. It would be a huge slap in the face to Apple if they did this.

tboggs13
on Jan 7, 2013

Unfortunately, I think this has very little to do with the content resellers (MS, Apple, Netflix, etc.) and a lot to do with the content owners. The closest we have to this is Hulu and it requires a monthly fee plus commercials. The content owners want to squeeze every dollar out of that content. I think a streaming service that had next day access to all cable/broadcast content would be as expensive as cable.

Univex
on Jan 7, 2013

I have started tagging my ripped wmv movies and tv shows so that they are recognised by Xbox Video using TigoTago
I did this by buying one of each and matching the information. For the unique identifier I simply got this from the website url for the specific movie or tv show and episode. It all works except that the individual episodes are not recognised so far, and I get a buy for xbox 360 option, though I can still play to xbox through the devices charm.

Univex
on Jan 7, 2013

For Batman Begins movie tag the following in TigoTago copying information from xbox.com/movies and knowing the necessary id tags. Leave everything else as is.

General
Title: Batman Begins
WM_Genre: Action Adventure
WM_Year: 2005

Media
WM_MediaClassPrimaryID: db9830bd-3ab3-4fab-8a37-1a995f7ff74b (this is common for all movies)
WM_MediaClassSecondaryID: a9b87fc9-bd47-4bf0-ac4f-655b89f7d868 (this is common for all movies)

Misc
WM_ContentDistributor: xblwin
WM_EncodingSettings: {891860F8-84D8-4B21-A177-BCE8AB1AD73B} (this is common for all movies and tv shows)
WM_ParentalRating: M (Get this from xbox.com/movies)
WM_UniqueFileIdentifier: X_id={E57B8A42-75CF-4F78-B4D8-0913460225BE} (where E57B8A42-75CF-4F78-B4D8-0913460225BE is copied from the url for Batman Begins in xbox.com)

Video
WM_SubTitleDescription: (Copy the description from the Batman Begins description on xbox.com)

Univex
on Jan 7, 2013

TV is much the same though the following is different:
Media
WM_MediaClassSecondaryID: ba7f258a-62f7-47a9-b21f-4651c42a000e (this is common for all tv)

Misc
WM_UniqueFileIdentifier: X_id={EBD28579-6546-436A-B60B-A50C34A2448A};XS_id={F530FFF5-AD3D-4A01-A2D8-3EC99F793796} (where EBD28579-6546-436A-B60B-A50C34A2448A is the episode code, hint right click and copy shortcut from the play button on xbox.com, and F530FFF5-AD3D-4A01-A2D8-3EC99F793796 is the series code copied from the url)
Despite the episode code the episodes are listed as Extras in the series and not the episodes. Inconvenient though hopefully someone can work this out.

darth3pio
on May 23, 2013

Zune Desktop can add the series info directly to WMV files. I had purchased two episodes of Firefly, but then ended up buying the Bluray. So far using your approach to fill in the majority of info and then using Zune to fill in what little remains works just fine.

*EDIT*

An program called Tag&Rename allows you to add custom thumbnails to the file. But messes up episode info placed in the file by Zune. So doing this before adding season number is advised if you don't want to repeat any steps.

Univex
on Jan 7, 2013

All the same a music style matching service would be nice.

prettyconfusd
on Jan 7, 2013

I'd like to see a list view option as used in Xbox Music as the tiles used for each video is seldom large enough to display the whole file name, most of the time I only see the series name and the season number but there's not enough space for the episode number, making things more difficult than they should be.

I do appreciate that it's mainly meant to draw you towards the Xbox Video content but until there's a subscription model and a more user friendly interface to discover and search for content to compete with Netflix and LoveFilm/Amazon there's just no hook for me to buy or rent anything from them right now.

Regarding the layout, while I'd like the list view from Xbox Music here, I'd really like the tiled view used in Xbox Video transferred to Xbox Music where it makes more sense with the album art all being square.

JohnS
on Jan 7, 2013

Hi Paul, I've created a subdirectory with a Folder.jpg collection for each film in my local films. The covers are properly in Media Center. in the XBox video app unfortunately not. Do you have a solution or a tip for me?
Thanks for the always great article from you!

Quicky
on Jan 7, 2013

I have two PCs in my house, a Windows 8 laptop and a Windows 7 dedicated MediaCenter PC under the TV. If I purchase a movie from the Movie Store within the Xbox Videos app on the Windows 8 laptop, can I then copy the movie to my MediaCenter PC for playback on that computer? Or does the DRM prevent playback on multiple PCs?

arrow22
on Jan 7, 2013

My experience with Xbox Video hasn't been as positive. Due to a hatred of "MS Points", I tried to rent a video through Windows 8, with the intention to use the "Play on Xbox" feature to get it to the TV. Nope, can't do that, the option was greyed out.

It seems videos rented on one device can't be played back on another, which is a frustrating experience.

I did end up renting it with MS points, and a quick chat with customer support refunded my first purchase, without any hassle.

dstrait
on Jan 7, 2013

A word of caution to those purchasing videos through Xbox Video. The two movies I was interested in purchasing had a time limited window in which I could stream the movies through the service. I seem to recall I had about 6 months to watch the movies from the cloud. The terms and conditions encouraged me to download the movies so I could continue to play them after the 6 month window.

This is not what I am looking for in a cloud movie service. I don't want a server full of digital movies to worry about. Until Microsoft addresses this time limited streaming issue I will be buying my videos on Bluray.

jsullyboy
on Jan 7, 2013

The Windows 8 app has no preview for movies, which is a key missing feature for me. The Xbox has it why not the win 8 app. Clearly the content is available.

eepyaich
on Jan 9, 2013

The biggest issue I've currently got with XBox Video is that it seems to require an awful lot of storage on c:\ to download purchased content.

For example, I've created a VHD on my Surface's SD card and have used that to provide the default location for files in my video library. If I purchase something small from the Video store I can see it goes onto this location fine.

However, when I purchased the Dark Knight Rises, which was listed at around 7.5GB), I found that

- it initially downloaded to a location deep within my profile (which is on c:\)
- once it had completed the download (i.e. video app said 100% downloaded), space on c:\ continued to disappear until the disk was completely full
- after about 30 minutes in this state, the download operation eventually failed in the video app and all my space on c: was recovered (around 12.5GB of it).

Naively, it looked like the app

- downloads the file under a temporary name onto c:
- does *something* to it, creating a second copy of the downloaded file in the same temporary location on c:
- presumably only then moves the file to the final library location (I say presumably, as I haven't managed to get this far).

This seems like a major issue to me, as given the relatively small storage space on the 32GB surface, it will stop most people from downloading movies at all.

MikeInSanJose
on Jan 12, 2013

Is there some other set-up/configuration needed to purchase/rent videos? I've tried to rent a movie a number of times. It tells me my purchase cannot be completed - try again later. I went back to my payment information to verify everything is correct, I click on my credit card, click the edit button, and am told my information cannot be edited because it does not exist in the system, even though it was displayed on the previous page. So I try to enter my credit card and am told it cannot be added because it already exists in the system... WTF? LOL. Either this is completely hosed or I'm missing something. And I forgot exactly where, but at some point in this exercise, I was advised to contact customer support but provided no means of doing so, nor any indication of what customer support I should contact... Microsoft has hundreds of support options... Windows 8? XBox? XBox Video? Is there a support for just this app? Call me "Confused"... Any thoughts?

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