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MediaPortal 1
Support
Watch / Listen Media
Television (MyTV frontend and TV-Server)
Live TV Stutter since Win 10 upgrade
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<blockquote data-quote="HTPCSourcer" data-source="post: 1186058" data-attributes="member: 74879"><p>It's rather the opposite: stuttering starts because CPU load is increasing.</p><p></p><p>I think that we are narrowing the issue down here: Some process must be running on your machine, which, when launched, leads to increased CPU load. You could use the task manager to try to identify the programme. Alterantively have a look at Process Explorer (Microsoft Sysinternals), which allows you to continuesly log information about all process running. However, it's going to produce tons of logs.</p><p></p><p>The one thing that you could also try is to see if there is any scheduled task that starts at the time of stuttering. Windows 10 has a multitude of tasks scheduled, some of them can be legacy from he previous WIndows version that you updated from (unless you made a frsh install of Windows 10).</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="HTPCSourcer, post: 1186058, member: 74879"] It's rather the opposite: stuttering starts because CPU load is increasing. I think that we are narrowing the issue down here: Some process must be running on your machine, which, when launched, leads to increased CPU load. You could use the task manager to try to identify the programme. Alterantively have a look at Process Explorer (Microsoft Sysinternals), which allows you to continuesly log information about all process running. However, it's going to produce tons of logs. The one thing that you could also try is to see if there is any scheduled task that starts at the time of stuttering. Windows 10 has a multitude of tasks scheduled, some of them can be legacy from he previous WIndows version that you updated from (unless you made a frsh install of Windows 10). [/QUOTE]
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MediaPortal 1
Support
Watch / Listen Media
Television (MyTV frontend and TV-Server)
Live TV Stutter since Win 10 upgrade
Contact us
RSS
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