Like Windows Vista and Windows XP before
it, Windows 7 includes a number of ways in which you can manage, view,
and otherwise enjoy digital movies. You may recall that Windows XP
included a special shell folder called My Videos. Actually, you will be
forgiven for not remembering that—in Windows XP, the My Videos folder
was curiously deprecated, unlike its My Documents, My Music, and My
Pictures siblings. It didn't appear on the Start menu by default and
couldn't be added later. In fact, My Videos didn't even appear in the
Windows XP shell until you started up Windows Movie Maker for the first
time.
In Windows Vista, the situation was only marginally
different. In that release, the My Videos folder was replaced by the
Videos folder, in keeping with Microsoft's Vista shell folder naming
scheme. It was no longer a special shell folder, and it was not located
in the file system inside of Documents as before. Instead, Videos sat
under your Home folder (C:\Users\Your username
by default) alongside Documents, Music, Pictures, and other commonly
needed folders. But it still didn't appear on the right side of the
Start menu for some reason, and once again there was no way to make it
appear there.
1. My Videos: Managing Digital Movies with the Windows 7 Shell
In Windows 7, finally, the Videos shell location has
become a first-class citizen alongside your other commonly accessed
user folders, though Microsoft continues to confuse with its folder
names. What this means is that you now have physical video folders
(including your personal My Videos folder at C:\Users\Your username\My Videos, and Public Videos at C:\Users\Public\Videos), as well as a new Videos library—shown in Figure 1—which
is a virtual folder that aggregates the content from other locations
(My Videos and Public Videos, by default) into a single view. Of
course, your Videos library can also be shared with others via Windows
7's new HomeGroup sharing scheme. While this evolution of the Videos
folder may seem convoluted, it's actually quite a bit nicer in use than
it used to be.
You can access Videos in various ways. The quickest
is to click on the Windows Explorer taskbar button; this opens a view
of the Libraries location, which by default displays icons for four
libraries: Documents, Music, Pictures, and Videos, as shown in Figure 2.
You could also simply open the Start menu, select Search and type Videos, and then tap Enter.
NOTE
If you're familiar with the way that Windows 7
libraries work, you won't be surprised to discover that the Videos
library aggregates content from two sources by default: your personal
Videos folder (C:\Users\Your username\My Videos)
and Public Videos (C:\Users\Public\Public Videos). Public Videos was
called Shared Videos in Windows XP and was in a different location, but
the Public Videos folder in Windows 7 works identically to that in
Windows Vista.
NOTE
The My Videos folder is the default save location for the Videos library, so when you copy content into Videos (the library), it is actually copied to My Videos (the folder).
There's also a Sample Videos subfolder in Public
Videos that includes a short sample video provided by Microsoft. There
is a shortcut to this folder in your Videos folder, but the actual
folder is located in C:\Users\Public\Public Videos\Sample Videos by
default.
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NOTE
Because of the proliferation of digital cameras
with video-taking capabilities, you could very likely also find videos
scattered around inside of your My Pictures folder. When you copy
pictures from a digital camera to Windows 7 (or to previous versions of
Windows), any videos on the camera will be copied to the same location,
which is typically a subfolder under My Pictures. You could easily use
Windows 7's Library functionality to find and display these videos
alongside the videos in My Videos and Public Videos. To do so, open the
Videos library and click the link next to Includes (it will read 2 Library locations
by default). In the Videos Library Locations window that appears, click
Add, and then navigate to My Pictures. Click Include folder, and then
OK. Unfortunately, when you do so, the Videos library shows you all of
the subfolders under My Pictures, not just the ones with videos, as
shown in Figure 3.
With all these different locations for finding
digital videos, you might wonder what Microsoft was thinking. Although
we could never claim to offer any insight along those lines, we can
tell you that video management, like that of music and photos, has
changed dramatically between Windows XP, Vista, and 7. And though it's
still possible to navigate around the Windows shell and double-click
movies to play them in Windows Media Player or another software tool,
Microsoft expects that most of its users will instead use dedicated
applications to manage and view digital movies. That said, the new
Videos library functionality is there for those who do wish to utilize
the shell more heavily. In this way, we think Microsoft struck a nice
balance and has provided solutions that virtually anyone will
appreciate.
NOTE
There's an even quicker way to access Videos
than those we've mentioned so far. If you're one of the many video
enthusiasts who have been clamoring for Microsoft to make it possible
to add a link to Videos from the Start menu, rejoice: You can now do
so. To add this link to the Start menu, right-click the Start button
and click Properties. Then, click the Customize button in the Start
Menu tab. In the Customize Start Menu window that appears, scroll down
to Videos and choose from "Display as a link," "Display as a menu," and
"Don't display this item." (The latter is the default.) As shown in Figure 4, this link corresponds with the Videos library, not the My Videos folder.