Back from holiday vacation, so I'd like to resume this now.
Why not just ask Ack-Ack what the name of that program is?
Well if its a $700 program it lacks relevance to me, as its too expensive, even if it is somehow better than Fraps, which I find unlikely unless its a hardware solution.
However, you are known on this BBS for having a top-of-the-line computer system, would you mind testing Fraps with Aces High and reporting back on how well it functions with your computer? If it doesn't perform well for you either, then I may as well not put a lot of effort into resolving this, as no adjustment I can make will likely matter. You can get a free trial version of Fraps at
www.fraps.com if you don't already own it, as I recall the trial is restricted to capturing only 30 seconds at a time, but that is plenty for testing purposes.
Aces is set to use 100% of your computer resources due to all the calculations on top of the graphics. WOW on the other hand doesn't. If you start running other programs while you run Aces you start taking resources away from it. The more you run the worst it gets.
If you must run fraps while in game, get your processes down as low as you can go. Kill off any other program you have running. Unless you have a monster system you'll need to clear up some room.
Just because a game has pretty graphics does not mean it is loading up the computer more. Pretty graphics loads up the video card more.
Aces High is far, far more demanding on the overall system than WoW will ever be. If WoW adds a dynamically driven physics based flight model, and gets into fights where hundreds of players have to be kept up with while in those mathematically draining models, then it might get to the hardware demand Aces High has.
Fugitive pretty much nailed it though.
This is actually quite useful information. So what you and Skuzzy are essentially saying is that Aces High is CPU bound, while WoW is more GPU bound.
To me the computer's performance while playing a game such as WoW or Aces High is directly related to the framerates achieved (and consistency of said framerates). Saying Aces High is more demanding on my "computer" when I can get it to run at nearly max settings at 60 FPS (synced with my monitor) while I can't do the same in WoW is to me disingenuous. Because to me, the computer is the entire system, not just one aspect of it that you seem to be measuring against.
But I will agree that Aces High might be more CPU-intensive... or from another perspective, that I have over-invested in my GPU for Aces High and over-invested in my CPU for WoW. This neatly explains why Fraps might run well for WoW but poorly for Aces High even when I set the graphical settings to minimums.
The next step would be to test the theory. Unfortunately I don't have access to a quad-core CPU that might be able to do the job better than my dual core, but I'll certainly try shutting down as many processes as possible before trying again.