A still from one of DPLA's new gifs, based on a NASA film. National Archives and Records Administration, via DPLA Not all gifs, the popular animated image format, come from pop culture or YouTube.
The National Archives released dozens of copyright-free animated GIFs to Giphy, a website that hosts the popular files and is integrated into various social media networks and mobile messaging apps.
Group’s spin-off of its archive of what was once the web’s third most-visited site features 4.5m animated images If you’re nostalgic for a certain time on the internet – a time before your Facebooks ...
“We can feature content that many users might not be aware of, and boost the profile of the agency with people who either might not be aware of the us, or may have forgotten about us since that high ...
The GifCities project lets you relive the web's early days with a staggering collection of animated images. Remember the dancing baby? Ed is a many-year veteran of the writing and editing world who ...
In celebration of its 20 th anniversary of web preservation, the Internet Archive has launched a new search engine dedicated entirely to the vintage GIFs that helped shape the early Internet. The ...