Whenever I make a post with a link to a gif as the URL, the post on clients like Sync, Liftoff, and Photon all actually show the .gif file in the post so it will play correctly. Whenever I view the post on lemmy-ui (the basic UI) though, sometimes it has some .webm file that was created on the original instance, and to actually get the gif to play you have to click on that or click on the link to the original website. How do I get the behavior on other clients to be the same for lemmy-ui, so the gifs will actually play? it

Example:

Photon Working

Lemmy UI Not Working

Lemmy UI Working

Edit: I don’t think it’s size, since this gif is smaller in size than this one

Also, here are my .env variables:

PICTRS__MEDIA__VIDEO_CODEC=vp9

PICTRS__MEDIA__GIF__MAX_WIDTH=512

PICTRS__MEDIA__GIF__MAX_HEIGHT=512

PICTRS__MEDIA__GIF__MAX_AREA=262144

PICTRS__MEDIA__GIF__MAX_FRAME_COUNT=500

I increased the values from default to see if that would fix it but no luck

  • @WhoRoger
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    11 year ago

    Oh come on, every cpu in the last 15 years has hardware support for multiple simultaneous playbacks of h264 video, and in the last 10 years x265 too.

    1000 gifs on a screen, yea that’s definitely not a page I ever want to see, thanks. Why the hell would I need that?

    And yea sure obviously gif is efficient on bare metal cpu, because it’s a format made for 33 MHz CPU without a floating point. It was also made with a handful specific use cases in mind and specced accordingly, so it has absolutely no place in anything else than animated clipart loops. Don’t even argue, please, this is so silly.

    • Izzy
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      11 year ago

      It can be an argument if you want, but it seems more like a discussion to me. I refute the idea that gifs are horrible and obsolete. You even give a use case in your post. If I have a 1 second looping image I’d much rather use a gif than a video format. So I believe they should work on Lemmy. The rest of the internet has no problem supporting this format.

      • @WhoRoger
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        11 year ago

        I’m not against gif in general as a format, nor for the specific use case I mentioned. (Even tho afaik webp or others can do animations and transparency too.)

        But you know that when people say “gif” they really mean “short video”, and don’t know the difference. And so when they are making a short video and saving it, they see “gif” in export options and choose that, because they think that’s what it is.

        A while ago I was debating with someone who was looking for an optimal way to encode gifs - as actual gif the format - of gameplay videos. Like, several minutes of HD gameplay, and they were using gif for that.

        Similar problem is with PNG which people use for just about anything, like screenshots of Instagram posts.

        If using more modern, better formats means killing old formats but also making the whole internet faster and me needing less storage space or not needing to go through conversion process every time, and maybe even eventually eliminating the ridiculously overcompressed or 100x recompressed or 8-bit dithered crap that are supposedly images and “gifs” these days, then I’m definitely for it.