I've never used this computer for any P2P operations, nor have I dl'd or installed any new programs in a couple of months. In addition I regularly sweep my system for spy/adware as well as run active AV. If I have lost part of my DirectX how would I know (this comp doesn't use PCIe or AGP for video).There have been 2 things going around lately, (like a flue or cold) this one comes from Peer to peer networks. It's the mysterious loss of your AGP or PCIe driver and or the loss of parts of DirectX.
Actually this system is brand new Too bad it's bare bones with on-board video.Wow your computer must be old! Even my real old AMD 500 used an AGP video card.
1. Run the DirectX diagnostics. It will tell you if it's working or not.
2. Try playing a commercial DVD using VLC and note the CPU usage. Post that here.
Thanks for the advice, as I previously posted, I have already tried all of the different video output modes, but no luck.Settings => Preferences => Video => Output modules
and here you select "Advanced Options" and afterwards you must see the configuration box for "Video output module". Maybe you have here a "bad" module and you should try another one, perhaps the direct X or opengl etc. I am not sure for Windows but you can try any mode you find there. After saving you restart VLC with your DVD.
Ok, but I reinstalled ALL of the chipset drivers and Video Card drivers, so shouldn't that have solved the problem if it was a missing driver?You are missing the AGP or PCIe driver for your motherboards chip set to make video acceleration work. I don't care if the chip set is on the motherboard it still needs the driver.
FYI You have proved that the driver is missing or corrupted in the tests you did as there is no other explanation.
Hey, good suggestion! I don't have any other software that can play DVD's on this comp (WMP can't either), so I dl'd Movie Player Classic. It also stutters quite badly on that player.... so could this be a DVD player problem? On the other hand, CD's play perfectly in the same drive.....Sorry if you already answered this -
Did you check with another DVD program that your computer reads DVDs correctly without VLC?
Because if not, maybe the fault is on the DVD drive...
Are you sure about this? because i had this problem with a year and a half old drive.This was true when DVD tech was new. But hasn't been true now for a very long time.
You could tryDVD Decrypter 3.5.4.0. I’ve been using it for quite awhile, and it works really well.Hey guys, I'd like to try coping the DVD content, but it doesn't seem to like doing it, what's a good DVD rip Program??
Preferably use the drivers supplied on the CD that came with your motherboard or obtain a (perhaps) a newer driver from the manufacture of the motherboard for your model. The same thing would be true if you purchased a system. The driver should be available from the manufacture of the computer for that particular series or model.Hey guys, I'd like to try coping the DVD content, but it doesn't seem to like doing it, what's a good DVD rip Program??
Also, I'm a little leery of "other chipset drivers". Why wouldn't those that are supplied by my mobo manufacturer work, and more importantly, where would I actually find other drivers? I'm leery of this because my original drivers worked fine for months, and I've never heard or installing alternate drivers except in the case of graphics cards, where the purpose was to tweak a few extra fps, or help overclocking.
I went to ASUS and downloaded the latest chipset drivers (they were the same version as what I have currently installed). I then uninstalled my "old" chipset drivers and installed the new ones from ASUS. However this did not help.Preferably use the drivers supplied on the CD that came with your motherboard or obtain a (perhaps) a newer driver from the manufacture of the motherboard for your model. The same thing would be true if you purchased a system. The driver should be available from the manufacture of the computer for that particular series or model.
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