| >> | Anonymous 25jan2026(su)19:57 No.107680 OP P1| this happened when i tried to recover the deleted files with recuva source from mukd360  | melt.swf (593.9 KiB) 320x240, Uncompressed. 134 frames, 18 fps (00:07). Ver6, AS1/AS2. Network access: No. Text: No. Bitmaps: No. Audio: Yes. Video: Yes. [find in archive] |
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| >> | Anonymous 25jan2026(su)22:26 No.107684 A P2R1| damn thats sick, great glitch art |
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| >> | Anonymous 27jan2026(tu)03:00 No.107858 B P3R2| more like reKURWA, am i right? the effect is called datamoshing btw, the effect is achieved by removing keyframes from the video |
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| >> | Anonymous 31jan2026(sa)22:34 No.107906 C P4R3 |
| >> | Anonymous 1feb2026(su)01:25 No.107909 D P5R4Not a video enthusiast, but I do know bullshit when I hear it. You dont get that effect from just removing frames. Next time you chime in. It would be best if you knew what you're talking about. |
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| >> | Anonymous 6feb2026(fr)23:17 No.107972 B P6R5>>107909 A video has key frames (containing full details about pixels) and in-between frames, which moves the pixels of the previous frame.The movement commands of the in-between is decided from manipulating the most recent keyframe. But if you remove that keyframe the movement will change the pixels which where already moved from the previous keyframe, causing the "smearing" effect. That's the basis of datamoshing, but I'm sure some artists that do this intentionally as an artform will use custom in-between frames to get specific movement directions for a desired effect. |
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