![]() Every 5 seconds or so, the video studders. Both the unRAID box running Plex server and the Gaming PC are brand new builds with i5 CPUs. I double checked, and the video is Direct playing, so its not a. For example, in my case at one point the video was oddly corrupted. In another case with watch together, it turns out Plex's solution for the other person not filling up the buffer is to rewind 2 seconds repeatedly until the buffer is magically full. Starting November 1, fans can purchase a physical copy of Top Gun: Maverick, complete with exclusive bonus content and a teaser trailer for Tom's next blockbuster movie Mission Impossible: Dead Reckoning Part One. With all of this big news in mind how can you watch Top Gun: Maverick once it drops? Well, you'll definitely need to get yourself a Paramount+ account first. ![]() If you're a new subscriber, you can try out a one-week free trial before opting into plans that start at $4.99 a month or $49.99 a year. The platform also gives a 25% discount rate for students, so if you qualify for that, absolutely check that deal out. ![]() If you're already a subscriber, all you have to do is check out the movie page on the website or the Paramount+ app.Īll that said, you can also plop on your couch and stream the original film. If this is true, then you're sure that you're streaming it through the internet. It should be bigger than 20Mbps and of course the video won't struggle.ģ) Play the exact same file on your TV through the appĤ) Monitor the network interface on OMV's web interface the same way to see if it is stuck around 20Mbps. Here's how you can test it to be sure if you don't got the required tools (network monitoring):ġ) Play a file with a bigger bitrate than 20Mbps from your wired computer through the PMS web interfaceĢ) On the OMV's web interface, go to "System information" > "Performance statistics" > "Network interface" and monitor it while the video is playing (for 2-3 minutes for example). That Nvidia Shield TV is looking pretty good right about now.Įdit: If you don't mind, I may send you one of my files to see how well Kodi on your Fire Stick handles it.īe sure to connect via the private IP, should be something like "" and no I am pretty sure that your problem comes from the TV App which is connecting and reading files on your PMS through the internet. I think my short term solution will be to install Kodi on my Windows/gaming box and add it to the Steam library then stream it through the Steam Link which is wired at 10/100 Mbps. When I run NAS connection tests using this software:, I consistently get 112-ish MBps. I actually think that it is properly utilizing my LAN, and I think that speed is actually 112 MBps. Regarding the wired PC through the Windows 10 Plex App, there was also no stutter there. I wasn't sure of a way to test the connection. Regarding the wired PC through a browser, there was no stutter that I could see. I have Kodi 16 Beta 4 installed on there and HVEC is a grayed out mess (the audio works surprisingly well, though). I'm hoping a future firmware update will fix that. My router doesn't quite seem to be outputting the initial throughput that it used to for some reason. I believe that's an unfortunate wireless communication between my router in the next room and the FIre Stick. I have TWC 300 Mbps down and 20 Mbps up, so the 20 Mbps up would be the cap. I don't think it's utilizing the local network. Regarding the wired TV, I believe the problem is with the app, itself. I'm going to assume that would work fine. ![]() I haven't tried putting an HVEC file on a USB and playing it, though. I'm apparently a few releases behind the Android app. I think your initial assumption, regarding the Plex app and several other aspects is correct. OK, so I've run a few tests over the wire between 720p and 1080p.
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