I would check on the hardware acceleration settings in Flash player. The following link is from Adobe and discusses the hardware acceleration settings in Flash.
If I have display problems with Flash Player, what should I do?
If you have display problems with Flash Player, such as poor picture quality or slow display times, deselect Enable Hardware Acceleration in the Display panel. This should eliminate hardware or driver compatibility problems with Flash Player. Flash Player then uses software to scale and display the content.
How can I display this panel again?
To view the Display panel:
Right-click (Windows) or Control-click (Macintosh) the application image during playback.
From the context menu, select Settings. The Display panel is the first panel shown.
Since playing with IE 9 works even if you have play them full screen, you may have your answer, just use IE 9 on full screen. Otherwise you can try uninstalling / reinstalling Adobe Flash player. You can shoot an email to Adobe and see if they have an answer.
You asked about 64 bit support. Has Flash ever worked on your system? If so then it is unlikely a 64 / 32 bit issue. You can always try opening a 32 bit browser and see if that makes a difference.
You can try msconfig and eliminate other programs in the background and see if they are interfering with Flash. To enter msconfig click start and type in msconfig in search. Click on the startup tab and uncheck all the files listed other than flash, click ok and restart the system and then play a video. If that helps then you know it isn't a driver issue but some other program causing the problem.
You can try reinstalling the video or sound driver.
If this just started recently you can try running a system restore and return the system back to a state in which Flash worked correctly.
If all else fails you can reinstall Windows, either by PC restore or a manual reinstall. Be sure to back up your data before doing so. The following link has more info on system and PC restore and manual reinstalls.
DELL-Terry B
4 Operator
•
3.5K Posts
0
June 1st, 2011 09:00
BilliamCC1976
I would check on the hardware acceleration settings in Flash player. The following link is from Adobe and discusses the hardware acceleration settings in Flash.
www.macromedia.com/.../help01.html
If I have display problems with Flash Player, what should I do?
If you have display problems with Flash Player, such as poor picture quality or slow display times, deselect Enable Hardware Acceleration in the Display panel. This should eliminate hardware or driver compatibility problems with Flash Player. Flash Player then uses software to scale and display the content.
How can I display this panel again?
To view the Display panel:
Right-click (Windows) or Control-click (Macintosh) the application image during playback.
From the context menu, select Settings. The Display panel is the first panel shown.
I hope that this helps
TB
BilliamCC1976
5 Posts
0
June 1st, 2011 23:00
That didn't help. I'm still experiencing the same issue.
DELL-Terry B
4 Operator
•
3.5K Posts
0
June 2nd, 2011 08:00
Since playing with IE 9 works even if you have play them full screen, you may have your answer, just use IE 9 on full screen. Otherwise you can try uninstalling / reinstalling Adobe Flash player. You can shoot an email to Adobe and see if they have an answer.
You asked about 64 bit support. Has Flash ever worked on your system? If so then it is unlikely a 64 / 32 bit issue. You can always try opening a 32 bit browser and see if that makes a difference.
You can try msconfig and eliminate other programs in the background and see if they are interfering with Flash. To enter msconfig click start and type in msconfig in search. Click on the startup tab and uncheck all the files listed other than flash, click ok and restart the system and then play a video. If that helps then you know it isn't a driver issue but some other program causing the problem.
You can try reinstalling the video or sound driver.
If this just started recently you can try running a system restore and return the system back to a state in which Flash worked correctly.
If all else fails you can reinstall Windows, either by PC restore or a manual reinstall. Be sure to back up your data before doing so. The following link has more info on system and PC restore and manual reinstalls.
support.dell.com/.../document
TB