The theory I have read is that some providers (who are also cable TV providers) are intentionally crippling YouTube so that it will not take away from their business.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/roberth...ions-youtube-fires-shot-across-cable-tvs-bow/
If true, I think I see a lawsuit in the works.
It's not that. I work for a smaller cable ISP and our top network engineer has spent a lot of time trying to figure out what's going on. His Apple computers seem to do it fine most of the time (my iPhone is usually fine too).
Hmm, I wonder what they are doing wrong. I am only a couple hours up 85 and never have an issue (with Charter).
Exactly.As far as I can tell, the problem is with YouTube's content delivery network. Sometimes, the 144p video (yes, ridiculously low-def) will freeze and hitch and a 720p video will load fine. Reload and the 720p video might hitch and buffer constantly. Seems random.
Youtube is working fine for me right now.
Watching a 720p video right now.
Just for the record, I use FIOS. Been having problems for months, been getting worse. I'm highly aggravated by this.
I have noticed the last 3 days that youtube has been amazingly smooth on FIOS. I wonder if something was done.
YouTube got Googled is the problem. Maybe it'll be smoother if you join Google+
YouTube got Googled is the problem. Maybe it'll be smoother if you join Google+
I noticed they seem to be pushing that, it started asking me questions about who i am, trying to make me create a channel, telling me that some features only work after i create a channel. No thanks, I just want a way to save playlists.
YouTube got Googled is the problem. Maybe it'll be smoother if you join Google+
Here's a good 4 page article from Ars on the issue. No fixes, but it gives the "why"...
http://arstechnica.com/information-...ecret-deals-that-make-and-break-online-video/
tl;dr
Greed and dick waving
YouTube uses "dash playback" now, which buffers the video in segments instead of allowing the whole thing to buffer. Apparently this feature was implemented because it is faster for users with good internet connections. The YouTube Center[2] user script for Greasemonkey/Scriptish can disable this and revert to the old buffering where you can skip to any point in the loaded video without re-downloading. It also seems to let you buffer the entire video.
I've tried it out and it seems to work as advertised, but skipping backwards is iffy. And if it doesn't work, it still has a ton of useful features for YouTube. The developer also suggests enabling auto-buffering, disabling auto-playback and disabling dash playback for those with slow internet connections. Hope it helps for some of you!
http://userscripts.org/scripts/show/114002 [2]
I found this on reddit. It might help some of you out with buffering problems...