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Please note that open-source maintenance is not my main focus at the moment.

I will not be investing significant effort in the very near future to review and address issues on this repository. However I do want my software to be useable!

If you have an issue that must be resolved for your work, please open a pull request to fix it, and send me a direct email to make sure that I see it. I ignore most messages from GitHub these days.

I'm also happy to help out if you have a question about how to use the library.

My email can be found at the top of this commit.

Keep in mind that I have a full-time job and a personal life as well as other hobbies that have taken priority over open source, so I might not respond immediately. But don't hesitate to follow up after a few days if you think I've missed your email.

Win95 Media Player

<img src="example/public/banner.png">

A React media player component inspired by the Media Player app that shipped with Windows 95 (one of the early versions of Windows Media Player).

Works on the web, in an Electron app, or anywhere ReactDOM will run!

See it live!

<img src="example/public/fullscreen.png">

Under the hood we rely on two React component libraries:

install

npm install win95-media-player

quick start

The first thing you need is a working React application. If you don't have one, you can try create-react-app to skip all the annoying parts of setting one up.

After that, adding Win95 Media Player to your app is simple!

Assuming you have this in your html...

<style>
  .player {
    /* width can be anything, this is just a suggestion */
    width: 350px;
  }
</style>
<div id="app"></div>

Just run this JavaScript:

// JavaScript
import React from 'react';
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom';

import { MediaPlayer } from 'win95-media-player';

const playlist = [
  {
    url: 'https://archive.org/download/CC1301_windows_95/CC1301_windows_95_512kb.mp4',
    title: 'Computer Chronicles - Windows 95'
  }
];

ReactDOM.render(
  <MediaPlayer
    className="player"
    playlist={playlist}
    showVideo
    fullscreenEnabled
  />,
  document.getElementById('app')
);

And you should have a working MediaPlayer on your page! It should look something like this.

api

MediaPlayer

A fully-functional media player component. Accepts all the props accepted by MediaPlayerUI and Cassette's PlayerContextProvider

MediaPlayerUI

The UI component used by MediaPlayer. If you're building a more complex media player app with Cassette, you can render this directly inside of a React tree wrapped by a PlayerContextProvider to hook into the surrounding playerContext.

props

Prop nameProp typeDefault valueDescription
getDisplayTextFunctiontrack => track.titleReceives a track object (or undefined if none is active) and returns a string of display text
showVideoBooleanfalseA boolean which must be set true to display video
fullscreenEnabledBooleanfalseIf set true, adds a maximize button to the title bar which will trigger fullscreen mode
classNameStringAn optional CSS class name to pass to the outer window div
styleObjectAn optional React style object to pass to the outer window div

special thanks

@felixrieseberg's windows95 app allowed me to play around with the real Windows 95 Media Player so I could extract the concept for this project.