January 2012
4 posts
7 tags
Animated GIF Minimum Frame Delay Browser...
Introduction
Motivated by frustration at the inconsistent experience related to viewing GIF-based works across different web browsers, this study seeks to examine the minimum supported frame delay values and quantify the discrepancies. Prior research on this topic can be found in humpy77’s deviantART journal entry from March 29, 2007 entitled, Frame Delay Times for Animated GIFs. However,...
8 tags
How to Disable Image Smoothing in Modern Web...
There used to be a time when images that were resized would retain their sharp edges, but several years ago web browsers began implementing image smoothing. I’ve always enjoyed being able to look more closely at the details in drawings online, but the experience is hampered when the pixels are blurred.
I’ve been looking for a way to eliminate this blurring effect that now commonly...
December 2011
9 posts
November 2011
4 posts
October 2011
3 posts
September 2011
3 posts
Jeremiah Johnson, Study for Partial Recollection with Initial State Uncertainty, 2011, GIF.
(View final version of this work at datacorruption.org)
July 2011
2 posts
June 2011
2 posts
Jeremiah Johnson, Fragments of a Hologram Rose, 2011, PNG.
(for Computers Club Drawing Society)
May 2011
4 posts
Jeremiah Johnson, Packet Loss Hex / Cursed Image 01, 2011, PNG.
(for Computers Club Drawing Society)
April 2011
8 posts
Jeremiah Johnson, Aesthetic Currency, 2011, PNG.
(for Computers Club Drawing Society)
Jeremiah Johnson, Channel 3 Contusion, 2011, PNG.
(for Computers Club Drawing Society)
Jeremiah Johnson, patt_rNs/07, 2011, infinite fill patterns, GIF.
Jeremiah Johnson, Internet Dream, 2011, PNG.
(for Computers Club Drawing Society)
March 2011
2 posts
February 2011
1 post
July 2010
2 posts
May 2010
3 posts
April 2010
5 posts
Hypnic Jerk
The neurological reason for hypnic jerks is not fully understood, although the two dominant theories suggest that as a subject’s heartbeat and breathing slow down, hypnic jerks occur as a natural part of muscular transition; or that as a subject falls asleep, their muscles begin to relax and cease working, causing the brain to believe that the body must be falling through air. It is thought...