WinXp Home running on AMD Athlon 2600XP with 512Mb RAM..
Have removed and re-installed WMP but still have exactly the same problem...
Any info would be appreciated.
TIA,
Wil
"Andrew" <andyt...@msn.com> wrote in message
news:05b201c38fae$bd211810$a301...@phx.gbl...
-Zach
--
(speaking for myself and doing this in my free time)
See http://www.nwlink.com/~zachd/pss/pss.html for some helpful WMP info.
Following up to your post with the resolution is good netiquette.
This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights.
All e-mail to this account will bounce or be deleted - *use the newsgroups*.
--
"Andrew" <andyt...@msn.com> wrote in message
news:2887701c3913d$4ace1c00$a601...@phx.gbl...
>Juss the other day i got an update for windows media
>player n i downloaded and installed it. everything was
>working alryt until the first song started to end. the
>player froze up and the i had to go in and do the 3
>finger salute n end processes on it. i really hope
>someone out here can tell me what to do to fix this ASAP.
>also if your encountering this problem plezz post in
>here!!
I was in the same situation as you, when reading e-mails with Agent,
and playing WMP9, a long pause would ensue between each song, no
matter if shuffle was on or not, no matter the length of the song
list.
Today I downloaded MDAC (Microsoft data access components) 2.8 off
Microsoft's site, installed it on my Windows XP and the problem
appears to be solved.
I'm playing it as I write this and there are no over-long pauses
between songs.
See if it works and post back the results.
But still totally unacceptable.
The thing is: everybody's computer is configured differently. What's unique
about your system that uniquely causes your computing life with WMP to suck?
Obviously it's something pretty danged unique about your computer (we get
back to "how many users are affected" there). If this was a general
problem - even something in the 1% range - it'd be a lot easier to fix and
understand. And realistically, if it was a problem in WMP, it'd be in that
>1% range. But- it's always possible that 0.001% of users find a certain
bug in WMP that nobody ever knew about.
So the question then becomes (if you want people to be able to fix):
* How does somebody else recreate your problem without using your system?
That can be a tough question to answer, but it is how a problem gets
isolated and eventually becomes possible to fix. :\
-Zach
--
(speaking for myself and doing this in my free time)
See http://www.nwlink.com/~zachd/pss/pss.html for some helpful WMP info.
Following up to your post with the resolution is good netiquette.
This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights.
All e-mail to this account will bounce or be deleted - *use the newsgroups*.
--
<anon...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:052301c3944c$a68c3e20$a401...@phx.gbl...
Any other ideas on how to stop WMP from hogging all the CPU?
Ken
sergio <sergiorogerdon'ts...@esmas.com> wrote in message news:<9vfrov4hf7kk518rq...@4ax.com>...
There was one video file in My Music that WMP couldn't play. I got an
unknown problem (or some such) error msg. Once I deleted that file,
WMP stopped using up all that CPU time and has been fine ever since.
My advice. Try playing all your media files, and delete those that
WMP can't play.
My hypothesis as to why corrupt media files cause this particular
problem in WMP is this: I think that when you start up WMP, it goes
thru your media files and for each file, it goes to the internet and
tries to bring down information about each file. When it gets to a
file that's corrupt in some specific way, it starts looping forever.
One way to find what file(s) is giving you problem is this. GO to
WMP, delete all the entries in your media library (but NOT the files
themselves), then do File, Add to Media Library, By searching
computer, and let WMP rebuild your media library. If you have a
corrupt file, WMP will hang partway thru this process. Then, compare
the contents of your Media Library with the contents of the file
folder where your media files are. You'll see that there are more
files in the folder than in the Media Library. One of the files that
didn't make it in the Media Library is the culprit that hung up WMP.
Does this make sense to anybody but me?
Ken
"Andrew" <andyt...@msn.com> wrote in message news:<05b201c38fae$bd211810$a301...@phx.gbl>...