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I purposely use very subtle animated GIFs to enhance quality of pages so users don't have to wait for Flash.
They dont flash, blink or twitter and I spend alot of time ensuring the file size is low. Usally they only run once or trigger by onclick or rollover.
It's a shame so many sites employ them for the wrong reasons, with little or no visual appeal forcing users to diasble what can, IMO, enhance the experiece.
<rant> over </rant>
the size of the animation was 6 frames, each about 1.5k, but one needed for in, and one for out, 12frames at 3k.
I swapped that for javascript and css, reducing the animations to 1/10th of the size, now 300bytes each.
so long as the getElementById works, the sliders work.
I would recommend preloading your images and creating the animation in JS, its alot faster.
And if you know your positioning, only change the bits of the picture that need to change. Don't just swap images, swap parts of images.
Symantec bought it out and bloated the heck out of it but I believe it still has the gif animation stopper. You can find the last versions of At-Guard all over internet as abandonware type of stuff. Works great even in windows2000.