Myself, I would go the the max memory possible. As for the 1080p videos freezing up and the 720p being twitchy, this sounds more like a codec (or video player) type problem (with some possibility being network - host server or internet connection speed related). You haven't indicated what player is being used, nor what your OS is. And, the pixelation you mentioned... this is most likely due to the actual video source. If the video source had not been originally recorded in that resolution and video file type but had been converted then the pixellation is almost certainly caused due to the size conversion when it was encoded. Think of it this way (try it out), take a photo using 320x240 resolution. On you system view it at original resolution. Now, view it at 640x480 resolution (up close and from a distance). Next at 960x600 (close and from a distance). You will see that the results are what you are describing.
On Mar 2, 7:54 pm, Metalhead Jay <[email protected]> wrote: > No, I clean my system regularly(every 3 or 4 days), so that's not the > problem. 360p and 480p video's play fine. 720p is a bit twitchy though > but plays. I've watched a few flicks on "stagevu.com" and they run > perfectly fine as well just slightly pixelated when close up to the > monitor. -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Computer Tech Support" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/computer-tech-support?hl=en.
