I’m currently watching the live stream for the NHL playoffs from CBC Sports. The quality isn’t great, but it’s better than nothing.
I had some difficulty getting a reliable stream in Windows Media Player. It worked fine on my MacBook using Flip4Mac, and it worked okay using VLC on my Windows machine. Yet, Microsoft’s media player was showing me five seconds of live video, and then freezing (the dreaded ‘buffering’) for 5 to 30 seconds. Five more seconds of live footage, and repeat.
I checked my connection speed, which was a robust 14 MB/second. Combine that with the reliable feeds on other apps and PCs, and the problem was certainly (and predictably) Windows Media Player.
I eventually solved the problem. Here’s how:
- Start up Windows Media Player.
- On the Tools menu, click Options.
- On the Performance tab, under Network buffering (yes, I’m troubled by the lack of title case), choose the second option. In the box beside Buffer, enter ’30’. See the screenshot below. This ensures that Windows Media Player will always queue up 30 seconds of video, ensuring that you don’t get jittery or frozen video.
- Click OK, and you should be good to go.
Thanks for the tip! I had this problem, too, and your fix worked.
Thank you it worked!
Thank you so much!! Brilliant yet simple fix, well done mate..
Increasing buffer size didn’t suffice here on streaming local UPnP-AV over WLAN, but disabling UDP as described here did it:
http://support.microsoft.com/?scid=kb%3Ben-us%3B307650&x=8&y=13