File :-(, x, )
Anonymous
Get Off My Plane!
>> Jhoh! !9J6Xe7Aqf.
     File :-(, x)
Way fixed.
>> Anonymous
Fords on a plane!
>> Anonymous
>>214707

3 whole megs for THAT? Tsk tsk! (Wag finger).
>> Anomynous
>>214720
This.
Gif.
Wins.

To the OP, 3 megs is absurd. But thank you for posting the source material.
Thank you, Jhoh! for way fixing it and keeping my ISP happy. Because unlimited bandwidth isn't, really.
>> Anonymous
>>214720
a president is out
>> Anonymous
Sorry about the file size thing... this is my first gif. oh and thanks Jhoh! for fixing it
>> Jhoh! !9J6Xe7Aqf.
>>215042
I figured it was your first gif so I didn't want to yell at you about fucking EVERYTHING!!!!!!!!!!!! up.

For future reference though, some tips for making a successful gif.

1: Add a frame delay. Having a delay of 0 makes it play unwatchably fast in ACDSee or picture browsers. 0.1 seconds is fine for just about every gif (unless it has a high amount of frames for its length).

2: If the gif is only a few seconds long, it shouldn't be bigger than 1 meg. Reduce picture size, delete extra frames. If the gif is a long scene (or something really awesome like Battlestar Galactica) then 2 to 3 megs is okay.

3: For American cartoons that have little amount of color blending and shading, saving in 128 colors instead of 256 is better. I only know how to do this in ImageReady though (hit the 4up tab above the gif you're working on).

4: You reduce file size by a tiny amount by cropping a small border around the edges of the gif. This also helps reduce that single pixel of white space that might show up on gifs that are ripped from video files.
>> Jhoh! !9J6Xe7Aqf.
By the way to make this gif smaller, I reduced file size, cropped it, and went through the frame display (on the bottom of ImageReady) selecting every second frame and deleting them. ImageReady makes it so easy, no wonder it's #1!