Monday, 6 August 2012 03:57 pm
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Twice on the weekend, my home PC monitor suddenly went into sleep mode and wouldn't wake up. Nothing I tried worked, so I settled for an emergency shutdown via the power button.
Both times, it happened right after I tried scrolling ahead in a YouTube video (a different video each time, and not a problem with videos I let play from the start). I could still get the audio just fine. I sure hope that's what triggered the blackout so I know to avoid it.
I suspect that it has something to do with a feature I added to Chrome and then (I thought) deleted because it was messing up my YouTube experience, albeit to a lesser degree. Either that or malware has circumvented my expensive defenses. I could resume using Firefox, but at home, that hasn't been able to show videos at all for a while.
My pattern has been a new PC every 4 years. This one is 3 years and 8 months old. Maybe I should stick with it just a little longer.
Both times, it happened right after I tried scrolling ahead in a YouTube video (a different video each time, and not a problem with videos I let play from the start). I could still get the audio just fine. I sure hope that's what triggered the blackout so I know to avoid it.
I suspect that it has something to do with a feature I added to Chrome and then (I thought) deleted because it was messing up my YouTube experience, albeit to a lesser degree. Either that or malware has circumvented my expensive defenses. I could resume using Firefox, but at home, that hasn't been able to show videos at all for a while.
My pattern has been a new PC every 4 years. This one is 3 years and 8 months old. Maybe I should stick with it just a little longer.
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How do your videos run in IE? If you're having video problems everywhere, you might need to upgrade your video card drivers.
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I no longer have shortcuts for IE since I got Chrome. A typed search tells me it's still on the computer, but I'm disinclined to return to it after all these years.
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It's probably either failing hardware or a driver problem. It could be, for example, something as simple as your monitor giving out, or your video card becoming flaky when it overheats.
More likely, though, it could be an incompatibility between your video drivers and the way newer Flash versions (hooray for auto-updates) use hardware acceleration when playing video. There's possible workarounds if this is the case: First, try to find updated drivers for your video card. If that doesn't help, you can right-click any Flash object to access Flash's settings, in which there will be an "enable hardware acceleration" checkbox. Try turning that off to get improved compatibility.
Good luck!
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Before I can find updated drivers, I need a reminder of how to find out which video card I have. In the meantime, I can disable hardware acceleration, but it looks like I have to do that for each video separately.
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As for finding out what card you have: Right-click the "My Computer" icon, either on the desktop or in the Start menu, and then choose "Manage" from the menu. When the "Management Console" comes up, click "Device Manager" in the menu on the left, and then you should be able to find "Display adapters" on the right. From there you can view the details of your video card, including the current driver version information so you can see just how old the current drivers are.
You have ruled out a loose cable, right?
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I did find that I have an ATI Radeon HD 2600 XT, tho not from the exact path you stated (I'm on Vista). Alas, finding a driver update is not as easy as I thought. One site had it for a different computer; another triggered an alarm from ESET Smart Security.
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Should we tackle the Firefox issue now?
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