I bought a realmagic DVR capture card years ago. I still have it my system and managed to make it work with XP. I had it originally working on my 450mhz Pentium 3 with Windows NT 4.0 It cost a lot when I bought it but would do realtime MPEG2 captures without dropping frames like what Premiere has done for you. Of course this card does hardware encoding so maybe that is the difference. I'd be checking my email, opening up browser windows, I even think I played an mp3 or two while capturing a half hour of video with it. So to answer your question, I think it is Premiere that is giving you the grief. -----Original Message----- From: MSU Network Administrators Group [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Richard Wiggins Sent: Sunday, July 22, 2007 7:06 PM To: [log in to unmask] Subject: [MSUNAG] Hints re Adobe Premiere on Windows? This weekend I've experimented a bit with Adobe Premiere Pro CS3. It doesn't seem very robust during the capture phase. If I simply switch to another window, it halts the capture. This is on a 2 gigahertz Core Duo computer. I even tried goosing the priority for Premiere in Task Manager to Realtime. Same effect: dare to leave the Premiere window, and I will halt capture. It also stopped capturing when my screen saver kicked in at 10 minutes. It's been a few years since I've fiddled with digital video. I would've thought by now you could nav to another window and surf the Web. Is video capture on Windows really still that brittle? Or is this Premiere wanting all the cycles? /rich Celebrating 50 Years of Computing at MSU computing.msu.edu/50years