How to Work Windows Movie Maker In Windows 7 and Vista


There was some pleasure when it was declared that Windows seven would have entry to an entirely new, rejuvenated edition of Windows Movie Maker. I say “have availability to”, because the new edition – Windows Live Movie Maker – would, instead, be a individual obtain – along with Windows Live Mail, Windows Live Photo Gallery, Windows Live Writer, and a few other factors. Certainly making some of those "core" products out of Windows seven was not everybody's favorite decision, but it keeps the OS thinner and more shapely. That is a great thing.

Sadly, the new Windows Live Movie Maker is probably not the follow-up that most people were hoping for. While it does utilize the modified lace bar interface, which is nice, most of the upgrades end there. The ever-usable “timeline” view is gone, taking a “picture from a preview” is no longer provided, and the ability to personally “stretch” things out to modify the moment has been changed with personally entering in principles. It’s too bad, too, because the modified Windows Movie Maker could have really hit it out of the park, but the more I use it, the more I find factors that I cannot do that I used to be able to.

The best part about it:

For newbies, WMM 2.6 is available for obtain, and seems to work just fine on Windows vista or Windows seven – both 32-bit and 64-bit. Even better, the WMM edition that was modified for Windows vista (ver 6.0) works on Win7 as well, provided you obtain the proper edition for your OS, and then run a simple set computer file. Version 6.0 (released with Vista) included new effects and changes, support for components speeding, and some more recent computer file types. Also, the UI is a rejuvenated and enhanced edition of the WMM 2.6 interface.

Why offer both versions?

The 6.0 edition provided some components speeding features that not every Windows vista machine backed. For those customers, the rejuvenated XP edition of WMM was launched as edition 2.6. Confused? Do not worry about it. For most people, the delivered Windows vista edition (6.0) is the best of the collection.

How do it Work?

Download Windows Movie Maker 6.0 (32-bit) for Vista/Win7
Download Windows Movie Maker 6.0 (64-bit) for Vista/Win7

Then

Extract the “Movie Maker” index and copy it to your C:\Program File directory. (Note: for 64-bit customers, the “C:\Program File (x86)” directory will not be used in this case, since the 64-bit edition of WMM is a true 64-bit application.) Open the “Movie Maker” directory that you just produced.
Right-click on the “reregdlls.bat” computer file and select to “Run as administrator”. Choose ‘yes’ when encouraged and allow the set computer file to run. It should only take a moment.
Finally, left-click on the “moviemk.exe” computer file and move it onto your Begin button to “pin it to the Begin Menu”.
Open the Begin Selection, simply click on “Windows Film Maker”, and go!