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Increase network performance when playing media

Published in Windows Vista Performance Tweaks by Steve Sinchak with 65,483 views

Windows Vista throttles your network bandwidth when you are playing any multimedia file such as an MP3 or a video. This was designed to ensure the CPU has enough free cycles available to play your media without skipping.  The down side is that when you are playing a multimedia file you will notice that your network speed of file transfers will decrease on high speed network connections. By default when you are playing a multimedia file your network transfers are limited to 10 packets per millisecond.

In Windows Vista SP1 Microsoft introduces a registry key that allows you to customize this setting.

[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Multimedia\SystemProfile]
NetworkThrottlingIndexValue

You can set NetworkThrottlingIndexValue between 1 and 70.  If you want to disable set the hexadecimal value to FFFFFFFF.

Microsoft warns that if you increase the value above 10 you may experience playback quality issues. Depending on your network setup, it is worth experimenting.

After making any changes a restart is needed.

Read more about this tweak on KB948066

 
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Comments
It appears that under Vista Home Premium 64-Bit SP2 that this key is called
NetworkThrottlingIndex. A minor change really, they just dropped the Value from the end from SP1 to SP2. This is to keep in line with Windows Server 2008 R2 and Windows 7 (RC at least) that use the new key type without the Value on the end.
246 days ago
 
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