• 1 Turn your video hardware acceleration down or off. Launch the Control Panel and click on the Display icon. Open your video display adapter's Troubleshooting menu (Settings>Advanced>Troubleshooting). Adjust the slider to either turn your hardware acceleration down or off. Under the "Settings" tab, you can also click the drop-down menu below "Color Settings" and set it to 16-bit instead of 32-bit.
• 2
Upgrade your sound and video card adapters. Updating the video adapter drivers is the more popular tip, but if your sound quality is suffering, your video playback quality will as well. Visit the websites of your sound card and video card's manufacturer and download the latest drivers from them--usually found on the support page.
• 3 If you are unsure as to who the manufacturers of your video and sound card are, open the Start menu and type "dxdiag" in the "Run" box for XP systems or in the "search" box for Vista and 7. Click the "Display" tab to find out about the video card and "Sound" for the sound card.
• 4
Purchase a new video card and/or some RAM to give your system the power it needs to handle your demanding videos and video applications. Simply power down your computer, remove the casing and insert the RAM sticks into available memory slots or insert the video card into a vacant AGP or PCI video slot--depending on your motherboard type.
• 2
Upgrade your sound and video card adapters. Updating the video adapter drivers is the more popular tip, but if your sound quality is suffering, your video playback quality will as well. Visit the websites of your sound card and video card's manufacturer and download the latest drivers from them--usually found on the support page.
• 3 If you are unsure as to who the manufacturers of your video and sound card are, open the Start menu and type "dxdiag" in the "Run" box for XP systems or in the "search" box for Vista and 7. Click the "Display" tab to find out about the video card and "Sound" for the sound card.
• 4
Purchase a new video card and/or some RAM to give your system the power it needs to handle your demanding videos and video applications. Simply power down your computer, remove the casing and insert the RAM sticks into available memory slots or insert the video card into a vacant AGP or PCI video slot--depending on your motherboard type.

No comments:
Post a Comment