Thanks for the reply. Sorry I'm a bit of a n00b, how can I check whether it is switching to intel graphics, and force VLC to use the dedicated graphics card instead?Video output has little with decoding process.
Are you sure that's not switching to Intel graphics ?
Many thanks, I will try that. Although, even if my new laptop is using its intel graphics card, should it be struggling with such a small video file? My old laptop has a much, much worse graphics card and it runs fine. So I'm wondering if the issue lies elsewhere...By default it should use the integrated graphics card.
Workaround: make a copy of VLC.exe and rename it to VLC-GPU.exe
Now you add VLC-GPU.exe to the list of programs in the Nvidia control panel and tweak it as you want.
You can either use the right click context menu on the VLC icon and choose "Run with graphics processor" then select the Nvidia card, or create and edit a new VLC shortcut to permanently assign it the Nvidia card.
AFAIK the size of the file does not express the complexity or level of the used codec.Many thanks, I will try that. Although, even if my new laptop is using its intel graphics card, should it be struggling with such a small video file? My old laptop has a much, much worse graphics card and it runs fine. So I'm wondering if the issue lies elsewhere...
Thank you for the reply. The system specs of my previous laptop are:What are the system specs on your previous laptop?
Also, please post make and model of the new machine. There might be an issue with it which can be identified if we know the make and model.
EDIT: The make and model of your TV might be helpful as well.
I changed video output mode to Direct3D11, is this what you meant by trying another video output module?Try another video output module:
http://wiki.videolan.org/WindowsFAQ-2.0 ... _output.3F
You can try with and without hardware acceleration.
You can also try to enable or disable some video options such as Overlay and/or Hardware YUV -> RGB conversions.
And check your computer latency:
https://www.sweetwater.com/sweetcare/ar ... cy-issues/
Thank you for the reply. The system specs of my previous laptop are:
Processor: Intel® Core™ i7-4510U (4M Cache, up to 3.1 GHz), 16gb ram, graphics card: GeForce GT 750M
The make and model of my new machine is: Lenovo ideapad L340.
my new tv is: Posted 26th LG 55SM8200PLA
Thank you for the suggestion Hitchhiker. Yes it is indeed the 17" model with GTX 1650. The TV does support miracast and intel widi. But everytime I try to connect with my new laptop it says "couldn't connect to your device". Whereas I tried with my old laptop, and it is able to cast wirelessly to the TV. I just can't catch a break with this new laptopThank you for the reply. The system specs of my previous laptop are:
Processor: Intel® Core™ i7-4510U (4M Cache, up to 3.1 GHz), 16gb ram, graphics card: GeForce GT 750M
The make and model of my new machine is: Lenovo ideapad L340.
my new tv is: Posted 26th LG 55SM8200PLA
Assuming Ideapad L340 is the 17" model your new machine with a GTX 1650 4GB should be more than capable of handling practically any 4K video. The same goes for the tele.
So the problem would appear to be the connection between the laptop and the TV. Does the TV support Miracast? If it does you could try connecting wirelessly instead of via an HDMI cable.
Thank you for the suggestion Hitchhiker. Yes it is indeed the 17" model with GTX 1650. The TV does support miracast and intel widi. But everytime I try to connect with my new laptop it says "couldn't connect to your device". Whereas I tried with my old laptop, and it is able to cast wirelessly to the TV. I just can't catch a break with this new laptop
Hi Hitchhiker, i ran the scan and all the drivers are up to date. The windows version on the affected laptop is version 1909 build 18363.1016Can you go to this Lenovo support site and run the scan to check for driver updates please. You might have to change the product, but there's a button on the left to do that.
Also could you please post the Windows 10 Build on both machines. In case you're not sure how to do that launch the Run command (Windows key + R) type: winver and hit Enter.
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