
go to your animation window, on the top right click the little button that makes another menu pop up and click 'select all frames'. Then right click one of the frames directly on its frame delay value and click 'other.' If your frame delay is in the 1/100s (0.03, 0.04, etc) it will be much faster. Let me know if any of that didn't make sense. this is usually best for when viewing animations in firefox. If anything put me off IE, it's the way it handles GIFs, which is to say, it fucking sucks.
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Tue 20 Oct 2009, 2:57,
archived)

I'm guessing you're still using Image Ready?
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Tue 20 Oct 2009, 3:03,
archived)

photoshop has imageready's functionality built in from cs2 forward! you didn't notice?
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Tue 20 Oct 2009, 3:12,
archived)

Don't get me fucking started.
Try this... find a .gif with different frame delays on each frame and import it into photoshop, preserving the individual frame delays, LIKE YOU USED TO BE ABLE TO DO IN IMAGEREADY.
Actually don't waste your time, because it doesn't work, and there is absolutely no workaround to fix it. As far as I am aware, Fireworks is now the only Adobe application that can fully support all features of an imported animated gif. And Fireworks is a bloated, tacked-together mess.
( ,
Tue 20 Oct 2009, 3:42,
archived)
Try this... find a .gif with different frame delays on each frame and import it into photoshop, preserving the individual frame delays, LIKE YOU USED TO BE ABLE TO DO IN IMAGEREADY.
Actually don't waste your time, because it doesn't work, and there is absolutely no workaround to fix it. As far as I am aware, Fireworks is now the only Adobe application that can fully support all features of an imported animated gif. And Fireworks is a bloated, tacked-together mess.