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GIF 87a
The original 1987 specification of the Graphics Interchange Format.
GIF 87a is the original version of the GIF format, published by CompuServe in 1987. It introduced the core features that made GIF famous: LZW compression for small file sizes and support for 256 indexed colors. However, unlike the ubiquitous GIF 89a, this original version lacks support for transparency, animation delays, and metadata comments.
A GIF 87a file starts with the header signature `GIF87a`. It defines the Logical Screen Descriptor and the Global Color Table. While it supports multiple image blocks within a single file (which could conceptually form an animation), it lacks the 'Graphic Control Extension' block introduced in 89a. This means there is no standard way to define frame delays, disposal methods, or transparent indices.
Developed by CompuServe in 1987 to provide a hardware-independent, compressed color image format for their online service. It replaced the earlier RLE-based formats and was designed to be efficient over slow modems.
Icon File
A generic, often ambiguous extension for icon resources.
The `.icon` file extension is a generic identifier for icon images. Unlike the strictly defined `.ico` (Windows Icon), `.icon` is often used in Unix/Linux environments or by tools like ImageMagick as a catch-all alias for various icon formats (including Sun Icon, XBM, or simply renamed ICO files). It is not a standardized format itself but a convention for naming icon resources.
The internal structure of an `.icon` file depends entirely on what created it. It might be a standard Microsoft ICO container with multiple sizes and color depths. It might be a persistent X11 bitmap (XPM). Or it might be a Sun Raster file used for icons on Solaris systems. Because of this ambiguity, it requires a robust viewer that detects format by 'magic bytes' rather than extension.
In the early days of GUI desktops (SunOS, IRIX, early X11), there wasn't a single unified icon standard like Windows .ico. The `.icon` extension served as a descriptive label for files intended to be used as desktop icons, regardless of their underlying binary format.
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