Content-type: multipart/x-mixed-replaceNetscape does this correctly. Internet Explorer 3.0 and others do not. If you use IE3.0 or another browser, contact your vendor and ask how it can be used with animated GIFs.
This IMG SRC is <http://tycho.usno.navy.mil/cgi-bin/nph-usnoclock.gif?zone=EST&ticks=04>
For a cool example, go here!
Or, add this reference to get one of the static (one-time) bitmapped clocks:
------U.S.Naval Observatory Master Clock------------
Time: Central Time
--------------------------------------------
The above IMG SRC is <http://tycho.usno.navy.mil/cgi-bin/xbmclock.xbm?zone=CDT>
Note: xbmclock.xbm is not a running clock.
You can supply these zones:
UTC ----- Universal Time EST ----- Eastern Standard/Daylight Time EET ----- Eastern Standard Time (no daylight time) CST ----- Central Standard/Daylight Time MST ----- Mountain Standard/Daylight Time MMT ----- Mountain Standard Time (no daylight time: Arizona) PST ----- Pacific Standard/Daylight Time YST ----- Alaska Standard/Daylight Time AST ----- Hawaii Standard Time GMT ----- Greenwich Mean Time/British Summer Time |
You can set the number of 1-second ticks from ticks=01 to ticks=62. We suggest you keep the number of tick low (~10) . You must provide the leading zero: 09 , not 9
The running gif clock service is experimental. It sends about 200 bytes/sec while the clock is running. If it doesn't totally crash our server, we will support it, but cannot guarantee it will always be available.