![]() ![]() Like going into Windows display settings and setting my refresh rate to 15 Hz. Like I'm dropping maybe 20% of my frames. When I play any type of media, I have noticed it feels like the FPS is really slow. Nothing ever stutters or bugs out, except for Plex Media Player or programs that for some reason are not hardware accelerated, so their rendering happens on the CPU instead of on the GPU. My desktop Windows 10 PC with latest drivers and Windows updates, has the following specs: Ryzen 3900X, RTX 3070, and 32GB RAM. Now that's out of the way, we can focus on the real issue. This is solely a software/program/client issue in Windows, that might be related to hardware acceleration (NOT to be confused with hardware accelerated transcoding). Nothing is being transcoded, nothing is acting weird. So, I'm having some stuttering issues, that are NOT related to my server or network. Please go to the relevant subreddits and support forums, for example: Build help and build shares posts go in their respective megathreads No referral / affiliate links, personal voting / campaigning / funding, or selling posts ![]() Welcome to /r/Plex, a subreddit dedicated to Plex, the media server/client solution for enjoying your media! Plex Community Discord Rules It still says direct play in the stream info page.Latest Regular Threads: No Stupid Q&A: Tool Tuesday: Build Help: Share Your Build: Submit Troubleshooting Post Files not showing up correctly? When I try it from my desktop's plex web app, its fine, no stutters, but I go to my tv, and its that stuttery mess that I was talking about earlier. (But yeah you might need a bit more specs since higher overhead, but thats only marginal.Ĭomparing it with a fully specced out Linux distro with GUI and all the bells ?Windows has, there's not much difference). It can also be the ram, if you're using an SSD try and see if you can assure the page-file is on there (might not be the best for SSD lifespan but at least its faster then HDD).īut making sure its not the WiFi should be relatively easy, just ask parents to do a test for half an hour or so, maybe less.Īnyone that would do that is just ignorant.Īs im using a Windows server too, and its very stable and pretty easy to use since familiar. ![]() (happens within milliseconds but still it can add up). the router would have to wait for one to finish before it can talk to another. Losing 1 packet in low buffered player will indeed look choppy/stuttering.Įspecially worsened if the viewer is on the same WiFi. Well the problem with WiFi is not the bandwidth but more its stability packet to packet. Please, dont bash me for using windows, its just easier for me to do, im willing to get another 4gb stick of ram, but not to waste hours to get linux wotking If I had to guess, its the ram, the os is probably eating most of that, with the video living on the page file and not enough of it being able to be on the memory at once, and the stuttering is caused by the video swaping from the page to the ram. When I try to watch something on my TV off of it, It stutters like once a second. The server has a i3 4130 and a 1x4gb ddr3 1600mhz kit, and is running off of wifi, though thats not the issue, it gets like 100-200 megabit speeds. When I try to watc something, theres micro stutters not seen in the video file. I have a plex/storage server using a windows file share, the server is running a as stripped version of windows I could get from a fresh install (windows 10 debloater and as much stuff disabled as I could get) Yes, I know, windows, it sucks blah blah, but after i had issues with samba on lubuntu, its much easier. ![]()
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