I've got movies playing in fast forward in YouTube HTML 5 mode if I play it in Google Chrome. If I open it with Firefox, it plays well. Any ideas?
4 Answers
If you're using Chrome from the dev
or unstable
channels, you probably have a bad Flash plugin enabled (this affects HTML5 audio as well for some obscure reason).
To fix it, go to chrome://plugins
and disable all the flash plugins. Then click +Details
to show the individual versions of Flash, enable them one at a time until the problem goes away.
This is the configuration that worked for me:
If you none of the versions you have work, you may need to install the adobe-flashplugin
package:
sudo apt-get install adobe-flashplugin
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Sadly if you only have the NPAPI version enabled most websites seem to think you don't have flash at all!– TimmmmJul 24, 2012 at 21:05
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1Yes, disabling of Shockwave Flash 11.3 r31 helped me. The only difference is that I'm using OpenSUSE 12.1 distro. Jul 24, 2012 at 23:30
Please note: sometimes if the problem still persists then this may be related to pulseaudio, in such case you can use
killall pulseaudio
pulseaudio would start automatically again
And restart the browser and it will work.
If this only works temporarily, you can try replacing pulse audio with the alsa module for good.
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2This is the only solution that worked for me. Strange thing was that using Jacob's solution gave me either a really fast youtube or a really stuttery and slow one. Aug 15, 2012 at 7:35
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1Same as ubershmekel here. Selecting a specific flash plugin made it either very slow or even faster. Leaving the plugins as they were and just killing and starting pulseaudio did the trick. Note:
sudo service pulseaudio restart
did NOT help.– nem75Aug 30, 2012 at 22:36 -
6You shouldn't need to explicitly restart it. It should start automatically as needed when not running..– TimoSep 4, 2012 at 6:48
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The problem just came back after a long hiatus. Any idea for a permanent fix? Nov 8, 2012 at 6:55
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I found some solutions:
Reset you're sound settings, (apparantly if you use hdmi for audio and video there is nothing slowing the playback down) so what you have to do is try changing audio playback device :)
One user found that "setting the specific speaker layout fixed my problem (from nothing to 5.1, as that is what I have)."
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Here I am a year and a half later to find out that HDMI audio does screw up the playback. Is there a fix for this?– LunyxJan 5, 2014 at 15:18
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Audio playback configuration changed somehow and was indeed the reason video playback was going too fast. Something you wouldn't easily guess but thanks for this answer because it solved my problem! In my case I changed it back to line-out and playback was normal again. Thanks! Jul 1, 2016 at 16:34
For me it was related to an install of Totem video player which installed a vlc multimedia plugin for chrome:
VLC Multimedia Plugin (compatible Totem 3.0.1)
Disabling this plugin made it work!