Michael wrote:Setting anti-virus background processes so that they don't continuously scan can do the trick (as you've explained). In place of continuous scanning, just have your anti-virus software do a daily scan at 2 or 3 AM or something.Michael wrote:I was running GForceGold 268 without problem with WMP9 and i-Tunes
for Windows on my WinXP SP1 PC.
After upgrading to version 270, I have jerky playback with WMP9. It doesn't break down or anything, even shows album covers and all - but, as I said, jerky visualization!![]()
I-Tunes is running great.![]()
What could be the problem?[/quote
For everybody experiencing the same problem, I can answer my own question now:I found out, that actually Norton Anti Virus is causing the jerky playback in Windows Media Player (as well as in the standalone version, I discovered since)! I-Tunes is, as I said not affected! As soon as Norton Anti Virus Autoprotect is been disabled, visualisation switches to smooth playback! Very strange!
???
Maybe someone can explain this to me!?!
Aside from this, I would very much like to look into this more are see if there's anything I can do (the key piece of information being that this all started with G-Force 2.7). Unfortunately, if I can't reproduce the problem here locally, there's no way I can examine what's going on (I have yet to see this with my own eyes--I just hear about it). So, if you live in the Boston or New York City area, let me know and I may just make a house call (no joke!)
Andy
Jerk/Burp every 2-3 secs
Moderators: BTT, andy55, b.dwall, juxtiphi
Jerk/Burp every 2-3 secs
I had something similar. I still would have if I had not ensured that my player (originally WMP, now JRMC) runs at "above normal" priority.
As a test, use the Task Manager to increase the process's priority group to "Above Normal". This won't cause any problems elsewhere, but in my case smooths out the visualizations.
BTW: W2K, XP and NT have an interesting treatment of thread scheduling. Every three seconds every thread gets a substantial priority boost which can wreak havok on real-time responses.
I hope this helps
Brian
As a test, use the Task Manager to increase the process's priority group to "Above Normal". This won't cause any problems elsewhere, but in my case smooths out the visualizations.
BTW: W2K, XP and NT have an interesting treatment of thread scheduling. Every three seconds every thread gets a substantial priority boost which can wreak havok on real-time responses.
I hope this helps
Brian
G-Force Stutter
After reading some Reply's to this Stutter problem, I tried disabling some of my AntiVirus Software. Guess what? It stopped!!!! I disabled CounterSpy which runs in the background. The stuttering stopped! I then re-initiated CounerSpy and the stuttering started again. This is great news! I don't know why I didn't think of it before. Pass the word around.
Hope this helps!
Mike
Hope this helps!
Mike