HTML5 video player stutters even after video is loaded
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I am using jwplayer to display videos on my websites but cannot manage to make them running smoothly. They stutter, especially in full screen, although I wait for the video to fully load.
I tried decreasing the video quality from by decreasing the bitrate from 3000k to 1800k (I use ffmpeg to convert the videos). The resolution of the videos is 1280x720 (HD).
Any tips what should I try next? Thanks
== EDIT ==
I tried displaying the same videos forcing jwplayer to use flash instead of html5, and with flash the videos played fine - so the problem is not with the videos themselves.
html5 video ffmpeg
migrated from stackoverflow.com Oct 24 '13 at 22:34
This question came from our site for professional and enthusiast programmers.
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I am using jwplayer to display videos on my websites but cannot manage to make them running smoothly. They stutter, especially in full screen, although I wait for the video to fully load.
I tried decreasing the video quality from by decreasing the bitrate from 3000k to 1800k (I use ffmpeg to convert the videos). The resolution of the videos is 1280x720 (HD).
Any tips what should I try next? Thanks
== EDIT ==
I tried displaying the same videos forcing jwplayer to use flash instead of html5, and with flash the videos played fine - so the problem is not with the videos themselves.
html5 video ffmpeg
migrated from stackoverflow.com Oct 24 '13 at 22:34
This question came from our site for professional and enthusiast programmers.
ffmpeg command and complete console output is missing. ffmpeg command-line usage questions should be asked at Super User since Stack Overflow is limited to programming questions. I voted for migration so please do not cross-post a duplicate question in Super User.
– LordNeckbeard
Oct 24 '13 at 18:31
@LordNeckbeard I don't think your comment is really relevant to this specific question.
– jadarnel27
Oct 24 '13 at 18:57
@jadarnel27 Which comment and why?
– LordNeckbeard
Oct 24 '13 at 19:05
1
@jadarnel27 My comment consisted of two parts (request for ffmpeg info and mention of off-topic). I was unclear as to which you were referring to. As for the stuttering the output was created by ffmpeg (so it is a major factor in this issue) the question uses the ffmpeg tag, and "any tips" were requested; which in this case requires the ffmpeg command and complete console output.
– LordNeckbeard
Oct 24 '13 at 19:20
1
The same on Chrome and Firefox?
– JasonXA
Jun 19 '15 at 22:34
|
show 1 more comment
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
I am using jwplayer to display videos on my websites but cannot manage to make them running smoothly. They stutter, especially in full screen, although I wait for the video to fully load.
I tried decreasing the video quality from by decreasing the bitrate from 3000k to 1800k (I use ffmpeg to convert the videos). The resolution of the videos is 1280x720 (HD).
Any tips what should I try next? Thanks
== EDIT ==
I tried displaying the same videos forcing jwplayer to use flash instead of html5, and with flash the videos played fine - so the problem is not with the videos themselves.
html5 video ffmpeg
I am using jwplayer to display videos on my websites but cannot manage to make them running smoothly. They stutter, especially in full screen, although I wait for the video to fully load.
I tried decreasing the video quality from by decreasing the bitrate from 3000k to 1800k (I use ffmpeg to convert the videos). The resolution of the videos is 1280x720 (HD).
Any tips what should I try next? Thanks
== EDIT ==
I tried displaying the same videos forcing jwplayer to use flash instead of html5, and with flash the videos played fine - so the problem is not with the videos themselves.
html5 video ffmpeg
html5 video ffmpeg
edited Oct 25 '13 at 8:27
asked Oct 24 '13 at 15:27
Adi Ulici
1752316
1752316
migrated from stackoverflow.com Oct 24 '13 at 22:34
This question came from our site for professional and enthusiast programmers.
migrated from stackoverflow.com Oct 24 '13 at 22:34
This question came from our site for professional and enthusiast programmers.
ffmpeg command and complete console output is missing. ffmpeg command-line usage questions should be asked at Super User since Stack Overflow is limited to programming questions. I voted for migration so please do not cross-post a duplicate question in Super User.
– LordNeckbeard
Oct 24 '13 at 18:31
@LordNeckbeard I don't think your comment is really relevant to this specific question.
– jadarnel27
Oct 24 '13 at 18:57
@jadarnel27 Which comment and why?
– LordNeckbeard
Oct 24 '13 at 19:05
1
@jadarnel27 My comment consisted of two parts (request for ffmpeg info and mention of off-topic). I was unclear as to which you were referring to. As for the stuttering the output was created by ffmpeg (so it is a major factor in this issue) the question uses the ffmpeg tag, and "any tips" were requested; which in this case requires the ffmpeg command and complete console output.
– LordNeckbeard
Oct 24 '13 at 19:20
1
The same on Chrome and Firefox?
– JasonXA
Jun 19 '15 at 22:34
|
show 1 more comment
ffmpeg command and complete console output is missing. ffmpeg command-line usage questions should be asked at Super User since Stack Overflow is limited to programming questions. I voted for migration so please do not cross-post a duplicate question in Super User.
– LordNeckbeard
Oct 24 '13 at 18:31
@LordNeckbeard I don't think your comment is really relevant to this specific question.
– jadarnel27
Oct 24 '13 at 18:57
@jadarnel27 Which comment and why?
– LordNeckbeard
Oct 24 '13 at 19:05
1
@jadarnel27 My comment consisted of two parts (request for ffmpeg info and mention of off-topic). I was unclear as to which you were referring to. As for the stuttering the output was created by ffmpeg (so it is a major factor in this issue) the question uses the ffmpeg tag, and "any tips" were requested; which in this case requires the ffmpeg command and complete console output.
– LordNeckbeard
Oct 24 '13 at 19:20
1
The same on Chrome and Firefox?
– JasonXA
Jun 19 '15 at 22:34
ffmpeg command and complete console output is missing. ffmpeg command-line usage questions should be asked at Super User since Stack Overflow is limited to programming questions. I voted for migration so please do not cross-post a duplicate question in Super User.
– LordNeckbeard
Oct 24 '13 at 18:31
ffmpeg command and complete console output is missing. ffmpeg command-line usage questions should be asked at Super User since Stack Overflow is limited to programming questions. I voted for migration so please do not cross-post a duplicate question in Super User.
– LordNeckbeard
Oct 24 '13 at 18:31
@LordNeckbeard I don't think your comment is really relevant to this specific question.
– jadarnel27
Oct 24 '13 at 18:57
@LordNeckbeard I don't think your comment is really relevant to this specific question.
– jadarnel27
Oct 24 '13 at 18:57
@jadarnel27 Which comment and why?
– LordNeckbeard
Oct 24 '13 at 19:05
@jadarnel27 Which comment and why?
– LordNeckbeard
Oct 24 '13 at 19:05
1
1
@jadarnel27 My comment consisted of two parts (request for ffmpeg info and mention of off-topic). I was unclear as to which you were referring to. As for the stuttering the output was created by ffmpeg (so it is a major factor in this issue) the question uses the ffmpeg tag, and "any tips" were requested; which in this case requires the ffmpeg command and complete console output.
– LordNeckbeard
Oct 24 '13 at 19:20
@jadarnel27 My comment consisted of two parts (request for ffmpeg info and mention of off-topic). I was unclear as to which you were referring to. As for the stuttering the output was created by ffmpeg (so it is a major factor in this issue) the question uses the ffmpeg tag, and "any tips" were requested; which in this case requires the ffmpeg command and complete console output.
– LordNeckbeard
Oct 24 '13 at 19:20
1
1
The same on Chrome and Firefox?
– JasonXA
Jun 19 '15 at 22:34
The same on Chrome and Firefox?
– JasonXA
Jun 19 '15 at 22:34
|
show 1 more comment
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
up vote
0
down vote
There might be tons of reasons for your problem; to name the few:
- limited bandwidth
- web server issues (congestion, throttling)
- low memory on client
- bad flash/browser compatibility
- bad video encoding
Each of them requires checking and then the whole question can be asked with more detail - you might even stumble on the solution by going through the checklist.
I added some details in the question. I don't think the problem is with limited bandwidth or congestion because, as I mentioned, the stuttering continues even when the video is completely downloaded. Bad video encoding also drops, because the videos work fine when played with flash.
– Adi Ulici
Oct 25 '13 at 8:28
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
If using Flash, toggle the hardware acceleration to see if it helps:
- Navigate to the Find Flash Player Version page.
- Verify that you are in the section titled "Find Flash Player version type and capabilities (Flash developers only)"
- Right click on your Player version and select "Settings"
- The Settings dialog will appear, change the tab at the bottom to display (if not already there) and uncheck (or if you'd like to enable, check) the "Enable hardware acceleration" checkbox.
- Close the dialog and restart your browser.
Source with screenshots: http://forums.adobe.com/thread/891337?tstart=0
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
0
down vote
There might be tons of reasons for your problem; to name the few:
- limited bandwidth
- web server issues (congestion, throttling)
- low memory on client
- bad flash/browser compatibility
- bad video encoding
Each of them requires checking and then the whole question can be asked with more detail - you might even stumble on the solution by going through the checklist.
I added some details in the question. I don't think the problem is with limited bandwidth or congestion because, as I mentioned, the stuttering continues even when the video is completely downloaded. Bad video encoding also drops, because the videos work fine when played with flash.
– Adi Ulici
Oct 25 '13 at 8:28
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
There might be tons of reasons for your problem; to name the few:
- limited bandwidth
- web server issues (congestion, throttling)
- low memory on client
- bad flash/browser compatibility
- bad video encoding
Each of them requires checking and then the whole question can be asked with more detail - you might even stumble on the solution by going through the checklist.
I added some details in the question. I don't think the problem is with limited bandwidth or congestion because, as I mentioned, the stuttering continues even when the video is completely downloaded. Bad video encoding also drops, because the videos work fine when played with flash.
– Adi Ulici
Oct 25 '13 at 8:28
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
There might be tons of reasons for your problem; to name the few:
- limited bandwidth
- web server issues (congestion, throttling)
- low memory on client
- bad flash/browser compatibility
- bad video encoding
Each of them requires checking and then the whole question can be asked with more detail - you might even stumble on the solution by going through the checklist.
There might be tons of reasons for your problem; to name the few:
- limited bandwidth
- web server issues (congestion, throttling)
- low memory on client
- bad flash/browser compatibility
- bad video encoding
Each of them requires checking and then the whole question can be asked with more detail - you might even stumble on the solution by going through the checklist.
answered Oct 24 '13 at 21:53
Daniel Mošmondor
324419
324419
I added some details in the question. I don't think the problem is with limited bandwidth or congestion because, as I mentioned, the stuttering continues even when the video is completely downloaded. Bad video encoding also drops, because the videos work fine when played with flash.
– Adi Ulici
Oct 25 '13 at 8:28
add a comment |
I added some details in the question. I don't think the problem is with limited bandwidth or congestion because, as I mentioned, the stuttering continues even when the video is completely downloaded. Bad video encoding also drops, because the videos work fine when played with flash.
– Adi Ulici
Oct 25 '13 at 8:28
I added some details in the question. I don't think the problem is with limited bandwidth or congestion because, as I mentioned, the stuttering continues even when the video is completely downloaded. Bad video encoding also drops, because the videos work fine when played with flash.
– Adi Ulici
Oct 25 '13 at 8:28
I added some details in the question. I don't think the problem is with limited bandwidth or congestion because, as I mentioned, the stuttering continues even when the video is completely downloaded. Bad video encoding also drops, because the videos work fine when played with flash.
– Adi Ulici
Oct 25 '13 at 8:28
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
If using Flash, toggle the hardware acceleration to see if it helps:
- Navigate to the Find Flash Player Version page.
- Verify that you are in the section titled "Find Flash Player version type and capabilities (Flash developers only)"
- Right click on your Player version and select "Settings"
- The Settings dialog will appear, change the tab at the bottom to display (if not already there) and uncheck (or if you'd like to enable, check) the "Enable hardware acceleration" checkbox.
- Close the dialog and restart your browser.
Source with screenshots: http://forums.adobe.com/thread/891337?tstart=0
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
If using Flash, toggle the hardware acceleration to see if it helps:
- Navigate to the Find Flash Player Version page.
- Verify that you are in the section titled "Find Flash Player version type and capabilities (Flash developers only)"
- Right click on your Player version and select "Settings"
- The Settings dialog will appear, change the tab at the bottom to display (if not already there) and uncheck (or if you'd like to enable, check) the "Enable hardware acceleration" checkbox.
- Close the dialog and restart your browser.
Source with screenshots: http://forums.adobe.com/thread/891337?tstart=0
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
If using Flash, toggle the hardware acceleration to see if it helps:
- Navigate to the Find Flash Player Version page.
- Verify that you are in the section titled "Find Flash Player version type and capabilities (Flash developers only)"
- Right click on your Player version and select "Settings"
- The Settings dialog will appear, change the tab at the bottom to display (if not already there) and uncheck (or if you'd like to enable, check) the "Enable hardware acceleration" checkbox.
- Close the dialog and restart your browser.
Source with screenshots: http://forums.adobe.com/thread/891337?tstart=0
If using Flash, toggle the hardware acceleration to see if it helps:
- Navigate to the Find Flash Player Version page.
- Verify that you are in the section titled "Find Flash Player version type and capabilities (Flash developers only)"
- Right click on your Player version and select "Settings"
- The Settings dialog will appear, change the tab at the bottom to display (if not already there) and uncheck (or if you'd like to enable, check) the "Enable hardware acceleration" checkbox.
- Close the dialog and restart your browser.
Source with screenshots: http://forums.adobe.com/thread/891337?tstart=0
answered Oct 25 '13 at 5:46
KennyC
1546
1546
add a comment |
add a comment |
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ffmpeg command and complete console output is missing. ffmpeg command-line usage questions should be asked at Super User since Stack Overflow is limited to programming questions. I voted for migration so please do not cross-post a duplicate question in Super User.
– LordNeckbeard
Oct 24 '13 at 18:31
@LordNeckbeard I don't think your comment is really relevant to this specific question.
– jadarnel27
Oct 24 '13 at 18:57
@jadarnel27 Which comment and why?
– LordNeckbeard
Oct 24 '13 at 19:05
1
@jadarnel27 My comment consisted of two parts (request for ffmpeg info and mention of off-topic). I was unclear as to which you were referring to. As for the stuttering the output was created by ffmpeg (so it is a major factor in this issue) the question uses the ffmpeg tag, and "any tips" were requested; which in this case requires the ffmpeg command and complete console output.
– LordNeckbeard
Oct 24 '13 at 19:20
1
The same on Chrome and Firefox?
– JasonXA
Jun 19 '15 at 22:34