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SPlayer 4.9.0
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How to Stream Videos From Computer to Tv - SPlayer

Connect your Windows PC to your TV and use SPlayer 4.9.0 to send video playback wirelessly or through an HDMI cable—the lightweight media player handles nearly every video format your TV needs without stuttering or crashes.

How to Stream Videos from Computer to TV

The fastest way to stream videos from computer to tv depends on your setup. If your TV supports HDMI, plug a cable directly into both devices and extend your display in Windows settings. For wireless streaming, connect both your PC and TV to the same Wi-Fi network, then use SPlayer's built-in streaming features or your TV's casting protocol (like Chromecast or AirPlay, depending on your model).

SPlayer works on Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows 10, and Windows 11—both 32-bit and 64-bit versions. The player supports MP4, AVI, MKV, MOV, WMV, FLV, MPEG, 3GP, WebM, and RMVB formats out of the box, so format conversion rarely becomes necessary. Most TV-connected setups just need the right player already installed on your PC.

Direct Connection Method

HDMI Cable Setup

Plug an HDMI cable from your Windows PC to your TV's HDMI input. Windows automatically detects the connection. Right-click the desktop, select "Display settings," then choose "Extend" or "Duplicate" depending on whether you want the same content on both screens or different content.

Open SPlayer and play your video. The intuitive interface makes navigation straightforward—click the video file, hit play, and adjust volume or subtitles using the on-screen controls. Hardware acceleration ensures smooth playback even with high-resolution files.

Audio and Subtitle Adjustment

Once connected, adjust audio settings within SPlayer if your TV's speakers aren't producing sound. Go to the audio menu and select your TV as the output device. The player includes built-in subtitle support for most formats—load SRT, ASS, or SSA files, and the software automatically syncs them with your video. Audio enhancement features let you tweak the mix if needed.

Pro Tip: SPlayer remembers your last playback position thanks to auto-resume playback. Close the player mid-video, disconnect your TV, and reconnect later—it picks up exactly where you left off. This saves you from hunting through a 90-minute film to find your spot.

Wireless Streaming Without HDMI

Using Built-in TV Features

Many modern TVs have Miracast, Chromecast, or Roku integration built in. These protocols let you broadcast from Windows without cables. Open SPlayer, start playing your video, then right-click and look for casting options if your TV brand is supported. Not all free video players include this—it's a feature that sets this lightweight media player apart.

If your TV doesn't support wireless protocols natively, you'll need a streaming device (Chromecast, Fire Stick, Roku) connected to your TV's HDMI port. The device handles the wireless connection while you control playback from SPlayer on your PC.

Format Compatibility and Streaming

Before you stream, verify your video file format. The player handles MP4 and MKV files reliably; if you have older RMVB or WebM files, learn about handling diverse video formats to avoid compatibility issues mid-playback. Lightweight design means smooth streaming even over home Wi-Fi networks—no lag, no buffering interruptions.

Getting Started with SPlayer

Compare lightweight players available for Windows 10 to understand why a free video player matters when streaming to your TV. Speed matters when you're managing playback across two devices. Download SPlayer, install it on Windows, point it to your video library, and create a playlist if you're streaming multiple files in sequence.

How to stream videos from computer to tv comes down to one principle: use a player that won't consume CPU resources while handling format variety. SPlayer delivers both. Plug in, play, and control everything from your keyboard or mouse—that's the simplest path forward.