Charlie Owen a couple of tips for Windows 7 Media Center developers and tester. First he has details of the new version of MCDiag, a tool for troubleshooting Media Center: “The Media Center Diagnostic Tool gathers a lot of pertinent information very useful to the team in troubleshooting issues with Windows Media Center” and the 2nd is a a tip on the Media Center event viewer logs:

Starting in Windows 7 you can now launch Event Viewer and navigate to the Applications and Services Logs > Media Center node to see these stack traces. For example, the screenshot below is what you would see if you ran the MarkupDebugging.mcml sample within Windows Media Center and pressed the button labeled ‘Crash The Application’

The changes to event viewer should help developers debug their apps which until now could be challenge!

 

Media Center Diagnostic (MCDiag) Tool [x64]
http://download.microsoft.com/download/3/E/1/3E17DF40-EF7A-44DE-8897-685BA68EBD00/MCDiag_x64.msi

Media Center Diagnostic (MCDiag) Tool [x86]
http://download.microsoft.com/download/3/E/1/3E17DF40-EF7A-44DE-8897-685BA68EBD00/MCDiag_x86.msi

2 thoughts on “Tools for Windows 7 Media Center developers and testers”
  1. I don’t know much about using Event Viewer. Trying to use it more to be helpful to the Media Center team for Win7. Interesting to see that Mr. Owen seems to name his computers like I do! In the house now:
    Adam-PC
    Rachel-PC
    Tristan-PC
    Mediaserver-PC and
    Media1-PC

  2. IAN… What are the chances of us getting tech specs or flows or PPT that talk about the high level architecture of the new/changed implementation of MC on Windows 7? Or is this stuff all out there in the MSDN corpus of information? I believe that the more info we get the better job we can do to redistribute the information and get it out to your users and others. I would hate to see this release of media center get muddied by the noise makers on TGB and Avforum filling it with so utterly useless banter re all the FUD, rumors and poppycock out there… If you have access to the info I would gladly read every word and then be an evangelist for good news and meaningful tech info vs. doom, gloom and FUD 😉 Also, do you have a windows 7 media center netmeeting/web meeting on a weekly basis?

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