Not sure if this is the same thing. But on a remote 1.23.3 system I sometimes log in to, I noticed a flicker lately. It's more of the bottom part of the video gets cut off randomly. Running Firefox 3.6.3. I get the 'flicker' on playback as well. All the stills from an event look complete to me though.
After reading this post about IE, I switched to that to check, and there's no 'flicker'. Actually, it did for a split second on start up and since then, it's been good with no 'flicker' for both live view and playback.
However, on my home system (again 1.23.3), using Firefox 3.6.3 there's no 'flicker' at all.
seriously. i had the same problem with opera - the 10.5 and 10.1 versions were so much faster at rendering than the 10 or 9 versions, the replay was 'flickering' - the new frame is drawn before your videocard/monitor/eye had the time to fully appreciate the last one
it's like waveing your hand in front of a TV set ...
anyways opera has a setting (pref/advanced/browsing/loading) called 'redraw instantly' where you tell it how quickly the page that you see should be drawn - change that and the flicker goes away
don't know yet what the firefox seeting for that would be ...
slower browsers (eg FF 3, 3.5) are not affected since the redraw is slower ... makes sense?!
glad it worked for you! this one can be tricky since everyone has a different video/cpu/browser/network performance, and speed/latency makes all the difference
for firefox it might be this setting (in about:config)
nglayout. initialpaint. delay
here's what mozillazine says about it:
Determines time in milliseconds to wait before an initial reflow attempt during page rendering. Default value is 250. Synchronize with content.notify.interval for best performance.
I have this problem too. I looked for the 'nglayout. initialpaint. delay ' setting in about:config, but it is not there, I find only two settings for nglayout, and both are either true or false.
I also tried the Options setting :
Options -> High b/w -> WEB_H_VIDEO_MAXFPS to 5
No joy either, anyone else come up with a fix for this except backing down to a older version of FF?
It appears that as long as I am looking at things on the local network it is not a issue, it is a issue if I am doing remote viewing. I guess the high bw of the local network moves enough info to keep FF happy, but when looking at a remote system the BW provided for the out-
going connection is not enough to keep FF happy.
Perhaps if all of those of us who use IP cams would drop a note to them perchance they
MIGHT get the idea that what they have screwed up really sux for a group of users and
I suspect that a larger group of users for whom this is a part of many things they view.
It would appear they ought to be able to come up with some form of fix as these streams
I am sure are more common than perhaps we realise.
It would appear to me that they had it fixed and some old code got back into the code stream
and now we have a corrupt version. Guess I will try to go back to 3.5 until it is fixed.
I added the stanza, but the value you gave did me no good, I started adjusting up and
down, I found that certain cameras would give a steady image, others would continue
to have the flickering lower edge, appears that if I get rid of it on one camera (I believe
it is related to frame rate) it pops up on another, or another group, and usually the key
is the frame rate.
Has anyone tried Opera 10.60? I updated to it and now the images are VERY slow to
appear if they do at all, any one have any ideas, I was running 10.10, it did pretty good,
but there were still some things, figured that a upgrade would perhaps fix them but now
it is so slow to display the images as to be useless...