![]() That way you are not confusing the user when they upload files smaller than 3MB and they fail for an unknown reason (unless you do as much research as I did). Keep the user’s source GIFs for storage and display during editing. I understand you need full frame data when you feed the GIFs to your conversion utility, but you can do this in-memory before each conversion and discard it afterwards. GIFs have the ability to provide only difference between image frames (deltas) and potentially greatly reduce the file size. The reason why they fail is that you are re-saving the GIFs on your server without any optimization, which can result in files much larger than 3MB, so you reject them. ![]() However, uploading many GIFs under 3MB fail. Please forward this to your engineering team for consideration.įirst of all, in your FAQ you inform us that the limit for GIFs is 3MB. My latest Artist Feature consists almost exclusively of GIFs (since that is the artist’s body of work) so I have a great use case of seeing how your GIF to video conversion performs. You guys are the best!įirst of all, love your platform! I’ve started doing an image-heavy publication called Retronator Magazine and Medium does an amazing job! This is an email I sent to I’m making it into an open letter in case anyone else is struggling with GIFs and is searching for answers about issues with uploading them.Įdit: As of July 15, all these issues are resolved! Even all the example images in this article are now GIFs, thanks to this letter and quick response from Medium.
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