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by shurcooL 4786 days ago
Agree, I think having at least a screenshot is a must. Or even an animated gif if it's some interaction (e.g. see plug [1]) you're trying to present.

[1] https://github.com/shurcooL/Slide#slide

3 comments

The only sites blocked in China that bother me are like dropbox and youtube. Suffice it to say, I see nothing on your github page, and all the links are broken.
http://i40.tinypic.com/21dkpx.gif

Re-uploaded the GIF file for him, hopefully this one loads for you.

TIL tinypic.com is blocked also :) CMCC wifi is a bit more strict than the other Chinese ISPs, they block imugr also while many other ISPs do not.

My problems are admittedly very niche, and I will get to see everything when I'm at work tomorrow (if my VPN was working, I could see them now...drats). Thanks for the try though!

Here, let me see if I can get blocked in china now: http://www.simcop2387.info/Slide_1.gif
Yes, that works, thanks!
You need a paid VPN account (, free ones works before they got too much attention and got blocked,) or other encrypted tunnels for HTTP payloads, in China.

BTW, nytimes.com and other whistle-blowers also get blocked.

We have a paid VPN account, it no longer works and we can't get a refund. It's like a game of cat and mouse, and I've kind of given up.
Wow, I didn't know that. So everything I host on Dropbox (and I host _everything_ on Dropbox) is unavailable in China?! Is this country-wide or ISP-specific?
YouTube, Dropbox, Facebook are nationwide blocks. Imgur, tinypic, media wiki etc...seem to be blocked by some ISPs.

I'm obviously careful about this, there are good alternatives that work (for now) in china, e.g. Skydive rather than Dropbox. But even I have to we YouTube for video uploads.

Thanks for the heads up. That's pretty awful. I'm not going to stop using Dropbox over it, but it is upsetting to know so many people can't access my work posted there.
You accelerate the mouse precisely in the points where I want to see the anomalies (when intersecting the table).
The object keeps sliding on its background surface as long as at least one of its pixels is visible, unless it encounters a collision that cannot be resolved otherwise. Once that's no longer the case, it pops forward (keeping the same spot under your mouse) until it is.

There are 2 other videos where hopefully you can see this happening. Or, better yet, you can try it running it yourself on Windows or Mac.

Added it.