![]() ![]() You can manually choose transcoding per file, If you enable #-transcode-# folder (At Navigation/Share settings-tab) - Unclick check box at "Hide #-TRANSCODE-# -folders" - An extra folder by that name will be available in each folder of your movies.If you see a progress buffer-buffer bar on the status tab, that means UMS is transcoding.if UMS is simply serving, then there's no buffering going on.To answer you question, At Transcoding settings main-tab, at bottom, you should be able to put * (asterikis-sign)- to force all extensions to transcode.transcoding properly, that might be just as good. So long story short, if anyone can explain why the above chopping is happening unrelated to the file size, that would be great, but if someone can also tell me how to get avi's, m4p's etc. Copy to a USB and run straight from the router, or right into the front of the PS3? Works fine. Remove the transcode, it works but badly. ![]() Uhoh: PS3 states it cannot play this file. So I added avi's to the list of forced files. This got me thinking why not transcode everything, not just mkv? It seems like the computer buffering it with the transcode is better than without. I used the Force Transcode option in UMS. I have set up an external HDD at the router and if I copy a file that ordinarily cannot play onto it and then stream it wireless to the PS3, it works fine. I don't believe this is a networking issue. I can then play another file that is only 700mb for 2 hours and it will play rubbish from the beginning. For example, I can play a file that goes for 2 hours and is 1.2Gb and it will work fine until the last half an hour where it will fall apart. I seem to have issues with lag and can't pinpoint why. ![]() I've got UMS 2.2.1 and am streaming wireless to my PS3. I'm a complete noob at this sort of stuff, so please bear with me. ![]()
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