You know what is more Annoying than a pixelated screen while watching a movie, is looking to a forum for an answer to a solution, and all everyone keeps posting is "I am having the same issue" instead of actually posting a solution......The original poster is looking for a reply with a solution to their problem, not continual posts from people saying they are having the same issue, and offering no solutions....FFS...
Here is a SOLUTION that worked for me: iN VLC, Go into Tools, Select Preferences, select "All" at the very bottom, select "Input Codecs" in the list, to the right, change "File Caching (ms)" to 300 and Network Caching (ms) TO 1000. You can try a variety of numbers, these are the ones that worked for me.
6000 ms = 6 seconds... which is NOT the maximum. VLC allows to chache up to 60 000 ms (60 seconds or 1 minute).After following RaDDx's suggestions ... I maxed out ALL settings ...
File Caching = 6000ms
While I don't speak for the VLC team, the short answer is no. Resource contention problems sepecifically regarding mechanical drives has always been there. It generally is not the responsibility of each software vender to monitor and adjust it's programs behaviour, based on current/predicted system load. That responsibility has always belonged to the operating system.This is extremely annoying when it happens, although I've noticed that it only seems to happen when another process is making heavy I/O demands.
Frankly I'd prefer if VLC just stalled for a moment rather than having decode errors which cause this grey screen. I've tried disabling frame skip and all the other options that I could think of, but nothing helps. There must be some way - some setting - that will make VLC wait if necessary to read the required data instead of just turning grey. Does anybody have any suggestions?
Return to “VLC media player for macOS Troubleshooting”
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 13 guests