On 05/29/2017 06:36 AM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
I do use an adblocker, but turning it off makes no difference.
Regardless, I was using it before this started. However, I've noticed something curious, when watching the connection withWireshark. There's a few packets (TLS v1.2), ending with an ack from my computer to port 443 (SSL), then all traffic stops for about a minute, then more packets and again stopping on that ack. The cycle repeats at approx 1 minute intervals, while the dot goes around the circle. Try reboot the router.
A router wouldn't worry about ACKs, regardless it has been rebooted a few days back. Also, that same router is used when those videos work fine on Windows.
Create a new virtual machine running Linux, try it.
Someone suggested tell you to check if flashplayer is installed.
Nothing has changed here in that regard.
Another person on the Spanish mail list comments a very strange but similar problem he has with youtube, this time using Windows, with chrome or Firefox. IE still works. Fails when he uses the network of the site he is at, accessing his client network with his given login. Any variation and it works again, like taking the laptop to another place, or using his login on another computer.
However, I did happen to have a 42.2 VM, which I had created before installing it as my main OS. That VM played those videos. I then cloned that VM and verified it played the video. Next, I updated the cloned VM to the latest updates and SURPRISE, SURPRISE, SURPRISE, the videos now fail. I went back to the original VM and those videos played OK. So, this problem was caused by some update that appeared with the past 2 weeks or so. I verified this by taking a VM where the videos worked, but then failed after the updates. Incidentally, I first came across this problem on my desktop system and also experienced it on my notebook. Both the 42.2 and Windows 10 Virtualbox VMs are on my desktop system. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org