1 hour ago · Culture · hide · 0 comments

This week, GlitchyZorua brought to my attention the Ibiblio Icon Browser, a collection of many thousands of GIF icons curated in the 1990s by Gioacchino La Vecchia. Glitchy’s goal was to archive a copy of all of the icons, which was turning out to be… challenging. A more-90s website you’re unlikely to see today. It looks pretty simple: (a) an index page, leading to (b) 24 sub-index pages, leading to (c) 57 icon directory pages, representing (d) 114 icon collections, containing anywhere up to (e) 7,296 icons, mostly but not always 32×32 pixels. Right? But the challenge comes when you try to go from a directory page to an icon file. It looks like you’re clicking a link, but really you’re clicking… an imagemap. I’ve talked about imagemaps before, but the essence of them is that you define areas of an image that, when clicked, hyperlink to different places. The most-common way of doing these was always client-side imagemaps, where the HTML code itself contained all of the coordinates and,…

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