![]() |
|
Welcome to Vista Banter. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions, articles and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to ask questions and reply to others posts, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact support. |
|
|||||||
| Performance and Maintainance of Windows Vista A forum for performance and maintenance tasks in Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.performance_maintainance) |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|||
|
Hi,
For awhile I could play videos with no problems, but now when I try to play them (from Youtube for example) they stop and start and stop and start with that circle thingy whirling when it pauses and take forever. I tried uninstalling the adobe flash player and reinstalling it, but that has not done anything to fix the problem. Any ideas? Thanks. |
|
|||
|
Hi, tripsovercats.
It sounds like your download speed is not fast enough to stay ahead of the player. So the player runs until the buffer is empty, then it has to wait for more data to be downloaded. You can either Pause the player until more of the video has been downloaded into the buffer, or get a faster connection. Do you have broadband, or a dial-up connection? If a cable broadband, does the performance vary with time of day? Many cable systems share connections among several users; when they all are online at the same time (in "prime time"), download speeds can slow down for all of them. Since your performance was OK "for awhile", maybe it slowed down when a new neighbor moved in or signed up. What else might have happened between "awhile" and "now"? These are just generic comments. If you need something more specific, please give us more details about your computer hardware, your Vista version, and your Internet connection, especially its advertised speed. RC -- R. C. White, CPA San Marcos, TX Microsoft Windows MVP Windows Live Mail 2009 (14.0.8064.0206) in Win7 Ultimate x64 RC 7100 wrote in message ... Hi, For awhile I could play videos with no problems, but now when I try to play them (from Youtube for example) they stop and start and stop and start with that circle thingy whirling when it pauses and take forever. I tried uninstalling the adobe flash player and reinstalling it, but that has not done anything to fix the problem. Any ideas? Thanks. |
|
|||
|
On Jul 25, 8:37*am, "R. C. White" wrote:
Hi, tripsovercats. It sounds like your download speed is not fast enough to stay ahead of the player. *So the player runs until the buffer is empty, then it has to wait for more data to be downloaded. *You can either Pause the player until more of thevideohas been downloaded into the buffer, or get a faster connection. Do you have broadband, or a dial-up connection? * Thanks for your reply. I have DSL with it looks like 54 mbps. I upgraded awhile back and it's supposed to be faster than the original DSL plan I had. I don't understand why the videos used to work just fine, but now everything takes forever. If a cable broadband, does the performance vary with time of day? *Many cable systems share connections among several users; when they all are online at the same time (in "prime time"), download speeds can slow down for all of them. *Since your performance was OK "for awhile", maybe it slowed down when a new neighbor moved in or signed up. *What else might have happened between "awhile" and "now"? I don't know. I have this issue now regardless of the time of day. For example, I was trying to look a vodeo even at 4:00 this morning and still had problems. These are just generic comments. *If you need something more specific, please give us more details about your computer hardware, your Vista version, and your Internet connection, especially its advertised speed. I have Windows Vista Home Basic. It looks like my system is 32 bit (I'm a novice with this sort of thing so I hope this is the right info.) RC -- R. C. White, CPA San Marcos, TX Microsoft Windows MVP Windows Live Mail 2009 (14.0.8064.0206) in Win7 Ultimate x64 RC 7100 wrote in message ... Hi, For awhile I could play videos with no problems, but now when I try to play them (from Youtube for example) they stop and start and stop and start with that circle thingy whirling when it pauses and take forever. I tried uninstalling the adobe flash player and reinstalling it, but that has not done anything to fix the problem. Any ideas? Thanks.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
|
|||
|
Hi, tripsovercats.
DSL should be fast enough for most YouTube and other online videos. DSL travels over your telephone cable, not your television cable, so unless you are on a party line (remember those?), it doesn't share bandwidth like many cable Internet services do, so the time-of-day question shouldn't matter. CenturyTel here advertises their DSL as "Consistently fast with 512 Kbps speed". Grande Communications, a cable TV service provider, advertises speeds from 1.5 Mbps to 24.0 Mbps; I have the 8.0 Mbps service. For technical reasons (which I don't understand), actual observed speed is seldom close to the advertised theoretical speeds. When I go to DSL Reports (http://www.dslreports.com/speedtest?flash=1) and run their speed test, it says my actual speed to Toronto is about 2120 Kbps at this time; it fluctuates - it was about 3500 Kbps 10 minutes ago. Let's try to Los Angeles...Wow! 6,266 Kbps! ;) As you may know, K is for kilo and M for mega; bps is bits per second; Bps (with the B capitalized) is Bytes per second, which is about 10 times as fast. Those numbers are not precise because the computer really deals in binary numbers, not decimal, but they are close enough for most casual conversation about speeds. All this theory and other users' experiences don't mean much when we are just trying to watch a video, though. When a YouTube video is playing, we usually see a little "thermometer" bar beneath the video. This bar is actually 2 bars in one. The brighter red bar has a moving button showing how far we are into playing the video. The pale red bar shows how full the buffer is. The red bar should go much faster toward the right, showing that you have downloaded the next minute, perhaps, of a 4-minute video, while the play button trails along, perhaps 20 seconds behind. If the play button catches up to the red bar, then the video will have to pause until the buffer has received something more to play. When you are playing videos, does your buffer bar stay consistently far ahead of the play button? As you can tell, I'm not a techie on this subject, so maybe someone who understands it better will jump in and educate both of us. I have Windows Vista Home Basic. It looks like my system is 32 bit (I'm a novice with this sort of thing so I hope this is the right info.) Two ways to find your Windows version; they work in WinXP, Vista, Win7 - and just about any other version. The very quickest is to just press Win+Break. That is, hold the Windows logo key as though it were the Shift key while you press the Pause/Break key. Some keyboards don't have these keys or they have different labels. So you can press Start, type "cmd.exe" and press Enter. This opens a Command Prompt window (which many of us veterans refer to as a "DOS window") where we can type commands on the command line. Here, just type "winver" and press Enter. Either of those methods should identify your Windows version, including the Service Pack level. If you are running a 64-bit edition, the System screen will say so; otherwise it is 32-bit. The 32-bit is still more common, I think, but 64-bit is catching up. RC -- R. C. White, CPA San Marcos, TX Microsoft Windows MVP Windows Live Mail 2009 (14.0.8064.0206) in Win7 Ultimate x64 RC 7100 wrote in message ... On Jul 25, 8:37 am, "R. C. White" wrote: Hi, tripsovercats. It sounds like your download speed is not fast enough to stay ahead of the player. So the player runs until the buffer is empty, then it has to wait for more data to be downloaded. You can either Pause the player until more of thevideohas been downloaded into the buffer, or get a faster connection. Do you have broadband, or a dial-up connection? Thanks for your reply. I have DSL with it looks like 54 mbps. I upgraded awhile back and it's supposed to be faster than the original DSL plan I had. I don't understand why the videos used to work just fine, but now everything takes forever. If a cable broadband, does the performance vary with time of day? Many cable systems share connections among several users; when they all are online at the same time (in "prime time"), download speeds can slow down for all of them. Since your performance was OK "for awhile", maybe it slowed down when a new neighbor moved in or signed up. What else might have happened between "awhile" and "now"? I don't know. I have this issue now regardless of the time of day. For example, I was trying to look a vodeo even at 4:00 this morning and still had problems. These are just generic comments. If you need something more specific, please give us more details about your computer hardware, your Vista version, and your Internet connection, especially its advertised speed. I have Windows Vista Home Basic. It looks like my system is 32 bit (I'm a novice with this sort of thing so I hope this is the right info.) RC wrote in message ... Hi, For awhile I could play videos with no problems, but now when I try to play them (from Youtube for example) they stop and start and stop and start with that circle thingy whirling when it pauses and take forever. I tried uninstalling the adobe flash player and reinstalling it, but that has not done anything to fix the problem. Any ideas? Thanks. |
|
|||
|
Woops! Replying to myself to say...
A few lines in my last post are quotes from YOUR post, but they are missing the "" quote indicators: I have Windows Vista Home Basic. It looks like my system is 32 bit (I'm a novice with this sort of thing so I hope this is the right info.) That's your system; mine is as shown in my Sig. RC -- R. C. White, CPA San Marcos, TX Microsoft Windows MVP Windows Live Mail 2009 (14.0.8064.0206) in Win7 Ultimate x64 RC 7100 |