Nojah. Küsimusi on nüüd juba nii palju, et vaene teema autor ei oska enam midagi kosta :)))
Muidu, kui CPU ja RAM ei ole 100% maha mängides, võiks pakkuda katsetamiseks ka näiteks Divx AntiFreeze nimelist vidinat, mis just sellisteks puhkudeks loodud, kui CPU ja RAM nagu oleks OK, kuid Divx video ikkagi hangub.
http://www.tac.ee/~prr/videoutils/DivXAF.0_4.zip
HD Videofriikide lehelt lühendatud kopipeist ühest analoogsest topicust:
"Video playback can require a lot of processing power, certainly when the video has a high resolution (720p/1080p/1080i). Some video formats, such as H.264, are very complex to decode, therefor more CPU usage.
If the video that you are playing contains H.264 video, then you could try using another decoder.
The codec packs and Windows by default uses ffdshow for decoding H.264 video.
This is a free and open-source decoder.
Other decoders exist that have better performance as ffdshow, they should give you smoother playback, specially if you have a dual-core or quad-core processor.
Alternative H.264 decoders:
CoreAVC.
This decoder is unfortunately not available for free.
DivX H.264 decoder.
This decoder is available for free as part of the DivX Bundle. Tip: disable everything in the bundle except the H.264 decoder.
ffmpeg-mt.
This is an experimental multi-threaded version of the libavcodec decoding library, which is used by ffdshow, you can select ffmpeg-mt as decoder in ffdshow video decoder configuration.
MPC DXVA H.264 decoder.
This is an internal decoder of Media Player Classic Homecinema. It uses your graphics card to perform most of the decoding process, resulting is a VERY LOW CPU USAGE ! You can enable this decoder though: MPC Options -> Internal Filters.
What I mean to say was exactly what I just post, and since one can through anything inside the video container, therefor will make it bigger and more workable for the computer to work with, leading to CPU performance increase, and some times even a CPU 3GHZ will fail to execute."