Greetings,
PowerDVD 8 Ultra used to drop frames (which created the "stutter" effect) on my system, too. But after upgrading to PowerDVD 10 Ultra I don't have the problem any more. Movies on blu-ray now play smoothly with no apparent dropping of frames.
When I upgraded from 8 Ultra to 10 Ultra, I was very careful about it. First, I removed 8 Ultra and used a registry cleaner to clean the Windows registry afterward.
A new NVidia driver had also come out for my video card so my second step was to remove the old video driver and install the new one. (I normally update my video driver whenever a new one comes out and I wanted to be sure to do so before I installed the 10 Ultra upgrade.) It's almost always best to remove old components before installing new ones even if the new ones claim you can install "over" or "on top of" the old ones.
The last thing I installed was the PowerDVD 10 Ultra upgrade after the above steps has been finished. The result is that PowerDVD 10 Ultra seems to run very well for most blu-rays.
Moderator CyberLink-Michael wrote in another thread that you need to have your old version of PowerDVD installed on your system when you install the upgrade since the upgrade installer will look to see if a previous version is present before allowing the upgrade to proceed. I don't know why this wasn't needed on my computer but you should be aware of the issue.
PowerDVD 10 Ultra is independent of previous versions. So, at the very least, you can remove the old versions after you have installed the upgrade.
The fact that PowerDVD 10 Ultra runs smoothly on my system without dropping frames from blu-ray movies shows that the program is capable of stutter-free playback. Nor is my Windows XP system super fast: It's a three-year old 3.2 GHz dual-core Pentium D with 4 GB of RAM and a NVidia GeForce 8600 GT video card with 512 MB of video RAM. That's not spectacular by today's standards.
Therefore, the video stutter you see is probably a secondary issue. You may need to update your video driver. Your Windows registry may still point to old drivers or old components that need to be cleaned from your system. You may have other programs running in the background that are interrupting the smooth flow of data to your video card. The CPU utilization does not tell the whole story. Aggressive security programs (like antivirus, antispyware, antimalware and firewall software) can sometimes interfere with video playback even when the CPU utilization appears low.
It's too bad that this stuff isn't easier to troubleshoot. It seems way more complicated than it should be. The only sure-fire "easy" way to play a blu-ray movie is with a stand-alone blu-ray player hooked to a conventional home theater system.
As soon as you start using a complicated peice of gear like a computer (Windows or Mac) to play blu-ray movies, you're adding complexity that can make troubleshooting a mess. I'm writing this just so you'll know that it is all too "normal" to experience problems when using a computer.
Kind regards, David
This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at Apr 06. 2010 12:50