RE: A gif thread to stop Psycho being banned... (Full Version)

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kalikshama -> RE: A gif thread to stop Psycho being banned... (9/6/2012 11:22:18 AM)

quote:

Wow that sucks!

Not to be able to watch movies or drive or anything.

Does it bother you to turn your head fast too?

From your post I am presuming that it does and I would be curious how you deal with it?


Fast flashing gifs give me a headache, but not movies, driving etc. For me, it's not the movement, but that an extraordinary amount of movement is happening per second.

Perhaps one of you gif posters can use the tool below and report back on the gif flicker rate of the strobing gifs.

Do Your Flashing Ads Cause Seizures?

Flickering, flashing and strobing effects on webpages can cause some people to have photosensitive seizures.

How Common is Photosensitive Epilepsy?

According to the National Society for Epilepsy, “one in 131 people have epilepsy and of these people, up to 5% have photosensitive epilepsy.” This means that for every 10,000 readers or visitors to your site, four or five people could have a tonic clonic (convulsive) seizure caused by flashing ads, animated GIFs or flashing red text.

What are the Recommendations for Bloggers, Internet Marketers and Web Designers?

The two guidelines related to making web content safe for people with photosensitive epilepsy are:

1. The Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.0, Guideline 2.3 requires webpages not to have any content that flashes more than three times per second and no more than three red flashes per second.
2. The US legislation Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act, which applies to all Federal agencies, states in subsection 1194.22 Pages shall be designed to avoid causing the screen to flicker with a frequency greater than 2 Hz and lower than 55 Hz.

How Can I Test Flickering Speeds?

For a quick test, download the Web Accessibility Toolbar for Internet Explorer (the lack of toolbars for other browsers is another accessibility issue!).

Once installed, click on Images (keyboard shortcut: alt + 4) on the toolbar, then select GIF Flicker Test. You’ll be presented with a basic report indicating which GIFs have flicker rates within the range that may affect people with photosensitive epilepsy.

For a more in-depth analysis, check out the Trace Center’s Photosensitive Epilepsy Analysis Tool (PEAT) – a free, downloadable resource for developers to identify seizure risks in their web content and software.

What is the Bottom Line?

Even if the object does not cause a seizure, it may cause nausea or dizziness in some people. Neither of these is as serious of a health risk as a full-blown seizure, but having users mentally associate your web site with feelings of nausea is probably not the best design decision, at least in terms of user satisfaction and repeat visits.

(From: Seizure Disorders)

Where Can I Find More Information?

- Understanding Guideline 2.3: Seizures
- Understanding WCAG 2.0: Three Flashes or Below Threshold
- Techniques for WCAG 2.0: Keeping the flashing area small enough
- Techniques for WCAG 2.0: Ensuring that no component of the content flashes more than three times in any 1-second period
- How POUR is Your Blog? Tips for Increasing Your Blog Accessibility




Real0ne -> RE: A gif thread to stop Psycho being banned... (9/6/2012 11:28:41 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: ModTwentyOne

I'm using a laptop, according to you that's not a real computer.



fuck I got coffee coming out of my nose LOL

Its not sorry.

look at my above post and compare what mine is running, and it only costed about 4and change.

Laptops are the equivalent to bringing a knife to a gun fight. The focus is on portability not workstation performance.

Thanks
r1










Real0ne -> RE: A gif thread to stop Psycho being banned... (9/6/2012 11:37:55 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: kalikshama

quote:

Wow that sucks!

Not to be able to watch movies or drive or anything.

Does it bother you to turn your head fast too?

From your post I am presuming that it does and I would be curious how you deal with it?


Fast flashing gifs give me a headache, but not movies, driving etc. For me, it's not the movement, but that an extraordinary amount of movement is happening per second.

Perhaps one of you gif posters can use the tool below and report back on the gif flicker rate of the strobing gifs.

Do Your Flashing Ads Cause Seizures?

Flickering, flashing and strobing effects on webpages can cause some people to have photosensitive seizures.

How Common is Photosensitive Epilepsy?

According to the National Society for Epilepsy, “one in 131 people have epilepsy and of these people, up to 5% have photosensitive epilepsy.” This means that for every 10,000 readers or visitors to your site, four or five people could have a tonic clonic (convulsive) seizure caused by flashing ads, animated GIFs or flashing red text.

What are the Recommendations for Bloggers, Internet Marketers and Web Designers?

The two guidelines related to making web content safe for people with photosensitive epilepsy are:

1. The Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.0, Guideline 2.3 requires webpages not to have any content that flashes more than three times per second and no more than three red flashes per second.
2. The US legislation Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act, which applies to all Federal agencies, states in subsection 1194.22 Pages shall be designed to avoid causing the screen to flicker with a frequency greater than 2 Hz and lower than 55 Hz.

How Can I Test Flickering Speeds?

For a quick test, download the Web Accessibility Toolbar for Internet Explorer (the lack of toolbars for other browsers is another accessibility issue!).

Once installed, click on Images (keyboard shortcut: alt + 4) on the toolbar, then select GIF Flicker Test. You’ll be presented with a basic report indicating which GIFs have flicker rates within the range that may affect people with photosensitive epilepsy.

For a more in-depth analysis, check out the Trace Center’s Photosensitive Epilepsy Analysis Tool (PEAT) – a free, downloadable resource for developers to identify seizure risks in their web content and software.

What is the Bottom Line?

Even if the object does not cause a seizure, it may cause nausea or dizziness in some people. Neither of these is as serious of a health risk as a full-blown seizure, but having users mentally associate your web site with feelings of nausea is probably not the best design decision, at least in terms of user satisfaction and repeat visits.

(From: Seizure Disorders)

Where Can I Find More Information?

- Understanding Guideline 2.3: Seizures
- Understanding WCAG 2.0: Three Flashes or Below Threshold
- Techniques for WCAG 2.0: Keeping the flashing area small enough
- Techniques for WCAG 2.0: Ensuring that no component of the content flashes more than three times in any 1-second period
- How POUR is Your Blog? Tips for Increasing Your Blog Accessibility


a lot of it is not the speed of the gifs which run typically between 10 and 30 frams/sec, worst case some may run as low as 4 due to size issues, and movies are 30.

People with antiques have more problems with their junk video card update speed than the gif flash rate and the flash rate of gifs usually do not go from one contrast extreme to another in one or two frames on a continual basis, they tend more so to change over several if not several hundred frames before there is high contrast change.

As I said earlier anyone that sensitive may want to consider not using the net at all for obvious reasons.

Most gifs that I posted were between 7 to 10 frames per second, how they look beyond that is up to their internet speed computer speed and their video card matters etc etc etc.

oh and that is only for avi's no one uses avi's they arent bandwith efficient







DesFIP -> RE: A gif thread to stop Psycho being banned... (9/6/2012 11:38:06 AM)

Gifs don't cause me a headache but they do slow up this ancient computer. However, I can't watch tv or movies when there are car racing scenes. Nor the kids playing video games where they race around. They make me nauseous and dizzy.




GreedyTop -> RE: A gif thread to stop Psycho being banned... (9/6/2012 11:45:14 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Real0ne


quote:

ORIGINAL: kalikshama

quote:

Wow that sucks!

Not to be able to watch movies or drive or anything.

Does it bother you to turn your head fast too?

From your post I am presuming that it does and I would be curious how you deal with it?


Fast flashing gifs give me a headache, but not movies, driving etc. For me, it's not the movement, but that an extraordinary amount of movement is happening per second.

Perhaps one of you gif posters can use the tool below and report back on the gif flicker rate of the strobing gifs.

Do Your Flashing Ads Cause Seizures?

Flickering, flashing and strobing effects on webpages can cause some people to have photosensitive seizures.

How Common is Photosensitive Epilepsy?

According to the National Society for Epilepsy, “one in 131 people have epilepsy and of these people, up to 5% have photosensitive epilepsy.” This means that for every 10,000 readers or visitors to your site, four or five people could have a tonic clonic (convulsive) seizure caused by flashing ads, animated GIFs or flashing red text.

What are the Recommendations for Bloggers, Internet Marketers and Web Designers?

The two guidelines related to making web content safe for people with photosensitive epilepsy are:

1. The Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.0, Guideline 2.3 requires webpages not to have any content that flashes more than three times per second and no more than three red flashes per second.
2. The US legislation Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act, which applies to all Federal agencies, states in subsection 1194.22 Pages shall be designed to avoid causing the screen to flicker with a frequency greater than 2 Hz and lower than 55 Hz.

How Can I Test Flickering Speeds?

For a quick test, download the Web Accessibility Toolbar for Internet Explorer (the lack of toolbars for other browsers is another accessibility issue!).

Once installed, click on Images (keyboard shortcut: alt + 4) on the toolbar, then select GIF Flicker Test. You’ll be presented with a basic report indicating which GIFs have flicker rates within the range that may affect people with photosensitive epilepsy.

For a more in-depth analysis, check out the Trace Center’s Photosensitive Epilepsy Analysis Tool (PEAT) – a free, downloadable resource for developers to identify seizure risks in their web content and software.

What is the Bottom Line?

Even if the object does not cause a seizure, it may cause nausea or dizziness in some people. Neither of these is as serious of a health risk as a full-blown seizure, but having users mentally associate your web site with feelings of nausea is probably not the best design decision, at least in terms of user satisfaction and repeat visits.

(From: Seizure Disorders)

Where Can I Find More Information?

- Understanding Guideline 2.3: Seizures
- Understanding WCAG 2.0: Three Flashes or Below Threshold
- Techniques for WCAG 2.0: Keeping the flashing area small enough
- Techniques for WCAG 2.0: Ensuring that no component of the content flashes more than three times in any 1-second period
- How POUR is Your Blog? Tips for Increasing Your Blog Accessibility


a lot of it is not the speed of the gifs which run typically between 10 and 30 frams/sec, worst case some may run as low as 4 due to size issues, and movies are 30.

People with antiques have more problems with their junk video card update speed than the gif flash rate and the flash rate of gifs usually do not go from one contrast extreme to another in one or two frames on a continual basis, they tend more so to change over several if not several hundred frames before there is high contrast change.

As I said earlier anyone that sensitive may want to consider not using the net at all for obvious reasons.

Most gifs that I posted were between 7 to 10 frames per second, how they look beyond that is up to their internet speed computer speed and their video card matters etc etc etc.





just because you think you are the be all / end all of all things doesn't mean that your personal experience applies across the board.


just sayin'.




TNDommeK -> RE: A gif thread to stop Psycho being banned... (9/6/2012 11:46:43 AM)

Yes so the last two pages were like Spanish to me. I have no idea what was being said, well except for the seizure part but the rams and gifs etc...Spanish.




Real0ne -> RE: A gif thread to stop Psycho being banned... (9/6/2012 11:56:52 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: GreedyTop


quote:

ORIGINAL: Real0ne

a lot of it is not the speed of the gifs which run typically between 10 and 30 frams/sec, worst case some may run as low as 4 due to size issues, and movies are 30.

People with antiques have more problems with their junk video card update speed than the gif flash rate and the flash rate of gifs usually do not go from one contrast extreme to another in one or two frames on a continual basis, they tend more so to change over several if not several hundred frames before there is high contrast change.

As I said earlier anyone that sensitive may want to consider not using the net at all for obvious reasons.

Most gifs that I posted were between 7 to 10 frames per second, how they look beyond that is up to their internet speed computer speed and their video card matters etc etc etc.





just because you think you are the be all / end all of all things doesn't mean that your personal experience applies across the board.


just sayin'.


thats not my personal experience but actual gif file frame rates, there are lots of free proggies and shareware for a couple bucks that you can get to see for yourself that I am not talking about my experience but the actual workings of the media in and of itself.

People often blame everything but their faulty equipment, I have plenty of experience dealing with all sorts of issues like this, enough to know.






doctorgrey -> RE: A gif thread to stop Psycho being banned... (9/6/2012 12:00:47 PM)

less that 7% of those with epilepsy are photosensitive
EG: may have a siezure/episode triggered by flasshing lights.
I guess that would include a gif animation.

CrG




ModTwentyOne -> RE: A gif thread to stop Psycho being banned... (9/6/2012 4:53:46 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Real0ne
Laptops are the equivalent to bringing a knife to a gun fight. The focus is on portability not workstation performance.



Being that I work from numerous locations, I'll stick with what I have.





Duskypearls -> RE: A gif thread to stop Psycho being banned... (9/6/2012 11:36:22 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Real0ne


quote:

ORIGINAL: Duskypearls


quote:

ORIGINAL: nephandi

Greetings

I would also like to add that some forums ban moving images as they can make people with Epilepsy have a seizure. I do not have epilepsy but I do have a problem with getting nausea and the like form that type of files for they move so quickly and repeat the movement again, and again and again. A thread with such images will be unsafe and unreadable for a pretty large amount of people.

I wish you all well


Thank you, thank you, nephandi, for bringing this up. My nervous system is VERY sensitive, especially to visual stimuli, and those moving files create much pain in my brain and spine, and overwhelm me. For survival's sake, I must make them disappear as soon as possible. The only other option I have is to quickly move off of that person's post/avatar, so I end up missing what they write.



Wow that sucks!

Yes it does, at times.

Not to be able to watch movies or drive or anything.

I can watch old timey movies, where movement, lighting and sound effects are normal and natural. Most movies today I cannot watch, as they overwhelm my system, can bring me to my knees, and cause me to go into the flight survival mode to remove myself from it as quickly as possible.

Does it bother you to turn your head fast too?

No it doesn't.[/b]

From your post I am presuming that it does and I would be curious how you deal with it?
I deal with it by carefully limiting my exposure. I don't go where most people go. I don't do what most of them do.

Imagine if all your senses; sight, smell, hearing, taste, experienced things 5 or more times more strongly than they already do. You would overwhelmed by loud noises, yelling, strong reactions to common, unatural smells (mechanical, chemical, etc.). It would exhaust you, and you'd be forced to remove yourself from them so you could carry on. It's kind of like being in a room full of 8 babies screaming at the top of their lungs. It wears you out quickly. You become very irritable, frustrated and angry, and all you want to do is get the hell away from it.

Imagine being so sensitive to others energy fields, that you picked up their internal states from 30-50 feet away, and knew what was going on inside them. Then imagine them standing 2 feet away from you in a checkout line, where you're picking up all their s**t, stress, anger, fear or instability. Talk about overwhelming and draining.








shallowdeep -> RE: A gif thread to stop Psycho being banned... (9/7/2012 2:52:45 AM)

Those with an aversion to animated GIFs or who are encountering performance issues may want to consider disabling GIF animation in your browser. Both IE and Firefox have a quick way to stop all GIF animations on the currently open page: hit the escape key.

There are also methods to disable all GIF animation by the browser:

In IE, go to "Internet Options > Advanced > Multimedia > Play animations in webpages" then uncheck the item and restart the browser.

In Firefox, type "about:config" in the Location Bar, hit enter, promise to be careful, search for "animation", select the "image.animation_mode" preference, and change its value from "normal" to "none".

Extensions are available for both Chrome and Safari that can disable GIF animations.




SpaceSpank -> RE: A gif thread to stop Psycho being banned... (9/7/2012 5:03:10 AM)

That all depends on the laptop.

You want a workstation replacement for a laptop? You can get one. The only thing a laptop lacks vs a desktop when bought at the same time is the ability to upgrade anything aside from the RAM and Hard drive.
The only exception is if you buy a super expensive desktop.

A laptop is just as much "real" computer as a desktop, it's just more expensive for equal performance. The reasons most people have issues with laptop performance is they get budget models with crappy and/or too little RAM, 5400 RPM hard drives, and an anemic video card.

You get a laptop with 8Gb+ RAM of good quality, an SSD hard drive, and a good Geforce or ATI video card and it's going to be comparable to any midrange desktop people buy for gaming.

quote:

ORIGINAL: Real0ne


quote:

ORIGINAL: ModTwentyOne

I'm using a laptop, according to you that's not a real computer.



fuck I got coffee coming out of my nose LOL

Its not sorry.

look at my above post and compare what mine is running, and it only costed about 4and change.

Laptops are the equivalent to bringing a knife to a gun fight. The focus is on portability not workstation performance.

Thanks
r1












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