No, I use the visualization in Windows Media Player for private applications. Playing an mp3 playlist, visualization with G-Force via a projector.
Windows Media Player - visualization stops after the first track in the playlist
When a playlist is played back or when "Play all music", the set visualization stops after the 1st track. If you play the titles individually or switch on with a click of the mouse, the visualization works normally. This is only for mp3 tracks, the visualization works with CD playback.I have 3 PCs running Windows 10 Pro - the same everywhere. I already reported the problem via "Send feedback" - unfortunately no response so far. I am a little surprised that there are no more primitive genes. But apparently not very many have the visualizations in use.
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M.P. Crowther 1 Reputation point
2021-04-16T20:12:41.317+00:00 I was told by someone on Microsoft Community to post here, as I'm having the same problem since the latest feature update which I did Wednesday. I did resets etc but though not a hugely important thing, irritating that it's gone wrong.
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Josef Danksagmüller 66 Reputation points
2024-05-22T18:15:59.83+00:00 When a playlist is played back or when "Play all music", the set visualization stops after the 1st track. If you play the titles individually or switch on with a click of the mouse, the visualization works normally. This is only for mp3 tracks, the visualization works with CD playback.I have 3 PCs running Windows 11 Pro - the same everywhere. I already reported the problem via "Send feedback" - unfortunately no response so far. I am a little surprised that there are no more primitive genes. But apparently not very many have the visualizations in use.
It is not really understandable that Microsoft obviously no longer maintains Windows Media Player. The "Groove Music" app recommended for Windows 10 is not compatible with plug-ins such as G-Force from SoundSpectrum. Many users therefore have to switch to alternative applications such as the very old Winamp, MediaMonkey or iTunes. That is a shame, because Windows Media Player is already a "multi-talent" among media players.