WIC in Microsoft products WIC is available for
Windows XP with Service Pack 2, as a stand-alone downloadable program, and is built into Windows XP with Service Pack 3. It is also available as part of
.NET Framework 3.0. A discontinued
PowerToy for Windows XP from Microsoft, known as Photo Info, which allows viewing and editing image metadata from Windows Explorer, also uses WIC. Starting with Windows Vista,
Windows Explorer, and
Windows Photo Gallery, are based on WIC and can thus view and organize images in any format for which a WIC codec is installed.
Office 2010 and later versions of the core Office apps (Word, Excel, PowerPoint and Outlook) can import image file formats supported by WIC. Starting with Windows 7,
Windows Media Center (available on Windows 7 Home Premium and above) is WIC-enabled. Also, the
GDI+ graphic library is built on WIC, although GDI+ does not load 3rd-party or external codecs. With Windows 7 the WIC stack itself underwent a major overhaul and is now free-threaded, as are all the built-in and external codecs shipping with Windows. Being free-threaded is also a requirement for new codecs targeting Windows 7.
Microsoft Expression Design's import and export capabilities are entirely based on WIC. Expression Media (now
Phase One Media Pro) with Service Pack 1 and later also supports additional raw camera formats and HD Photo (now
JPEG XR) using WIC.
Third-party support As of 2018, few third-party imaging applications (image editors, image organizers and image viewers) utilize WIC.
FastPictureViewer, a simple standalone third-party image viewer, supports standard image formats along with
HD Photo and RAW camera formats (NRW, NEF, CR2, DNG) using WIC. An experimental WIC import
plug-in for Adobe
Photoshop can also be found on FastPictureViewer's website. Another WIC import plug-in for
GIMP can be found at Gimp-Forum.net. == See also ==