The problem shouldn't be on the RAM or CPU or Video card, the hardware need for video playing is small.
I'm quite sure that it is your harddisk that is not reading data fast enough. Most people only care increasing system performance on CPU, some people on RAM and Video Card, but almost noone cares about the harddisk.
The simple logic is, if the harddisk is unable to feed the video data to the RAM, no matter how fast the CPU, RAM, Video Card, etc is, the video file would play choppily.
Tips: if you don't want to buy a new harddisk (preferably with a SATA connection, which means you might need to buy a new motherboard), you can reencode the video file, smaller video files tend to play better.
2006-11-13 09:35:49
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answer #1
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answered by Lie Ryan 6
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What kind of video clips? Are the clips buffering? If not, then your computer may not be powerful enough to run them.
2006-11-13 11:19:45
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answer #2
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answered by chuck g 5
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Upgrading your video card will most likely solve the problem. You may wanna look at increasing your memory too.
2006-11-13 11:20:53
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answer #3
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answered by mis d 3
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