You Can't... You have to put your iTunes on a CD and then Rip the songs onto Windows Media Player to play iPod songs.
Tune4Win m4v Converter and Tune4Win M4P Converter can help you convert iTunes movies and iTunes musics to Windows Media Player with great quality.
You can visit this tutorial: How to play iTunes iPod music video movie on Windows Media Player and vice versa
Yes, you can with Windows Media Player.
The only way to watch iTunes movies on nothing. The best thing to do is get a macintosh.
There are several different programs that can play music besides Windows Media Player. 'I Heart Radio', 'iTunes', 'Pandora' and 'Quick Time Player' can all play music on an Internet capable device.
None, because the to of them are different. Itunes is for buying music from the apple company and yes you can pretty much use it as a media player, like iPod, iPod touch ect... And Windows Media player is mostly likely a media player that let you play you're music and movies on you're PC, and can play Mp3 format and CD Kinds to.
No it can not. You need special codecs to do this. Or you can download itunes or use Quicktime Pro. I will recommend Cyberlink powerdvd.
iTunes songs music are in m4a m4v format and under DRM protection, but windows media play supports wma/wmv file formats. you need to remove the drm protection and then convert m4a/m4v to wma/wmv and then transfer.
It is any media file, Windows Media Player can play.
No. Windows Media player can't play mkv files.
You can purchase music in MP3 format from sites such as Amazon mp3. These mp3 files can be played on the majority of media players such a Windows Media Player, Winamp or iTunes. You can also purchase music from the iTunes Store. However these files can only played within the iTunes player (although you can download codecs which will allow mp4 files, the file format iTunes and iPods use, to play on Windows Media Player.).
The important button of windows media player is play button
Windows media is a media player, just double click the video and it should play in windows media.